The Chronicle

China to visit as Koreas bonding

-

THE foreign minister of North Korea’s chief ally China will visit Pyongyang this week following the historic summit between the leaders of the two Koreas.

The trip by Wang Yi comes as Beijing and Pyongyang continue an effort to repair ties that have suffered from tensions in recent years, and ahead of a planned meeting between US President Donald Trump and the North’s leader Kim Jong-un.

Foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang said yesterday that Mr Wang will visit tomorrow and Thursday.

China is the North’s only major economic partner, but trade has declined by about 90 per cent after Beijing imposed economic sanctions over the North’s nuclear bomb and ballistic missile tests.

Mr Kim last month made his first visit to Beijing since taking power six years ago, kicking off a flurry of diplomacy highlighte­d by his meeting with South Korean President Moon Jae-in last week.

South Korean officials said Mr Kim told Mr Moon that he would be willing to give up his nuclear weapons if the US commits to a formal end to the Korean War and a pledge not to attack the North.

Mr Kim also pledged to shut down the North’s nuclear test site in May and disclose the process to experts and journalist­s from South Korea and the US, Seoul’s presidenti­al office said.

China has long called for dialogue between the parties and welcomed the summit as a vehicle for reducing tensions.

Analysts say China’s sanctions implementa­tion may have helped prompt the North’s diplomatic initiative­s although the secretive regime in Pyongyang has made no public comments on the issue.

China says sanctions are intended to further diplomacy rather than punish the North and opposes any measures that could topple the regime, possibly bringing a tide of refugees across its border and leading to the stationing of US and South Korean troops in the North.

In other news, North Korea’s parliament has announced it will unify its time zone with South Korea from May 5 to promote reconcilia­tion and unity.

The announceme­nt came after the Seoul government revealed on Sunday that during Friday’s summit North Korean leader Kim Jong-un made the decision to move his country’s clock forward 30 minutes so the two Koreas could share the same time zone again.

NORTH KOREA’S PARLIAMENT HAS ANNOUNCED IT WILL UNIFY ITS TIME ZONE WITH SOUTH KOREA FROM MAY 5 TO PROMOTE RECONCILIA­TION AND UNITY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia