Gulf Today

Koreas set up first hotline between leaders

Line links presidenti­al Blue House in Seoul with the Pyongyang office of the nuclear-armed North’s State Affairs Commission, which Kim chairs

-

SEOUL: North and South Korea installed the first-ever telephone hotline between their leaders on Friday as they prepare for a rare summit next week aimed at resolving the nuclear standoff with Pyongyang.

South Korea’s presidenti­al office said a successful test call was conducted on the hotline between Seoul’s presidenti­al Blue House and Pyongyang’s powerful State Affairs Commission.

South Korean President Moon Jae-in and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un plan to make their first telephone conversati­on sometime before their faceto-face meeting next Friday at the border truce village of Panmunjom.

South Korean officials say the hotline, which will be maintained after the summit, will help facilitate dialogue and reduce misunderst­anding during times of tension.

“The historic direct telephone line between the leaders of the South and North was connected a short while ago,” South Korean presidenti­al official Youn Kun Young said in a news briefing.

SEOUL: The two Koreas opened a hotline between their leaders Friday, a week before a summit between North Korea’s Kim Jong Un and the South’s President Moon Jae-in in the Demilitari­zed Zone.

The line links the presidenti­al Blue House in Seoul with the Pyongyang ofice of the nuclear-armed North’s State Affairs Commission, which Kim chairs - one of his most important titles.

“The historic connection of the hotline between the leaders of the two Koreas has just been establishe­d,” said senior Blue House oficial Youn Kun-young, adding that a test conversati­on between oficials lasted 4 minutes and 19 seconds.

“The connection was smooth and the quality of connection was also very good,” he said. “It felt like talking to a neighbour.” Geographic­ally the two are next door to each other, but the peninsula has been divided for 70 years, with no post or telephone communicat­ions between them for ordinary civilians since the end of the Korean War in 1953.

The hotline, which enables direct communicat­ions between Kim and Moon, is the latest step in a whirlwind of diplomacy on and around the Korean peninsula, triggered by the Winter Olympics in the South.

The two leaders are due to meet on Friday on the southern side of the DMZ, in what will be only the third inter-korean summit since war ended with an armistice rather than a peace treaty, leaving them technicall­y still in a state of conlict.

Seoul is pushing for a declaratio­n that the war is over as a prelude to the signing of a treaty, with Moon declaring Thursday it was a goal that “must be pursued”.

US President Donald Trump, who is expected to hold his own muchantici­pated summit with Kim later, previously offered his “blessing” for the two Koreas to discuss a treaty.

Everything hinges, though, on the question of the North’s nuclear weapons.

Pyongyang - which last year carried out its most powerful nuclear test to date and launched interconti­nental ballistic missiles capable of reaching the United States - has long insisted that it needs them to defend against a US invasion.

It has since offered to negotiate over them in exchange for security guarantees, but the phrase sometimes used, denucleari­sation of the Korean peninsula, has long been code for the withdrawal of US troops in the South and the end of its nuclear umbrella over its security ally − something unthinkabl­e in Washington.

The US, on the other hand, is adamant that it will accept nothing less than the North’s complete, veriiable and irreversib­le denucleari­sation.

Trump warned this week that his summit with Kim could still be called off, saying: “If I think that it’s a meeting that is not going to be fruitful, we’re not going to go.

“If the meeting, when I’m there, is not fruitful, I will respectful­ly leave the meeting.” Moon said Thursday that the North had shown “a willingnes­s for a complete denucleari­sation”, and had not demanded the withdrawal of US troops.

“They are only talking about a security guarantee of its own,” he said, but added that “the devil is in the details” and it was “too early to guarantee the success of dialogue”, which could only come “after a successful Us-north Korea summit”.

For its part the North has been reticent about the process, making its irst oficial reference to contacts with the US only last week, when the oficial KCNA news agency said Kim discussed “the prospect of the DPRK-US dialogue”.

But for more than a month KCNA has hardly mentioned the North’s nuclear capabiliti­es either.

 ?? Associated Press ?? An official from South Korean President Blue House talks on the phone with North Korea side for a hotline test in Seoul on Friday.
Associated Press An official from South Korean President Blue House talks on the phone with North Korea side for a hotline test in Seoul on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain