You Are Here: Home» Asian News » North Korea: Kim Jong-il 'in Beijing to meet Hu Jintao', 25 May 2011 Last updated at 04:20 GMT
China had already confirmed Mr Kim was in the country, on his third visit in little more than a year.
It comes as the North faces another severe food shortage and diplomatic isolation over its nuclear programme.
North Korea's economy has collapsed in recent years and correspondents say China is keen to avoid a political crisis that could send masses of refugees over the border.
Mr Kim is also said to be soliciting Chinese support for his youngest son to succeed him as ruler.
Both countries usually do not announce details of Kim Jong-il's visits until they are over.
Blocked report The South Korean news agency Yonhap has reported his touring of several economic development zones, a concept which China, his closest ally, is believed to be encouraging him to pursue.
The World Food Programme (WFP) estimates that six million North Koreans are suffering from food shortages.
A US envoy for human rights, Robert King, is on a week-long visit to the country to assess the severity of its food shortages.
It is the first visit to Pyongyang by an American official in 17 months, and the first by a rights envoy since 2004.
Mr King will look at whether the US should resume its food aid programme to the country.
The programme was suspended two years ago as relations between Washington and Pyongyang deteriorated.
There has been fierce debate about whether Pyongyang is exaggerating the food problem to allow it to feed its army or stockpile supplies.
According to a leaked United Nations report, North Korea has shared ballistic technology with Iran. The public release of the report has been blocked in the UN by China.
There is also the issue of North Korea's nuclear programme. Pyongyang is believed to have enough plutonium to build about six atomic weapons.
Talks on North Korea's denuclearisation stalled in 2009. Efforts to revive them were complicated by North Korea's apparent sinking of a South Korean warship last March at the cost of 46 lives, and its shelling of a South Korean border island in November.
Seoul has wanted apologies, or at least acknowledgement, from the North before talks can resume.
Previous approaches to persuading the North to end its nuclear plans have included promises of aid and replacement technologies for Pyongyang.
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