The Phnom Penh Post

North Korean leader lauds South’s hospitalit­y

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NORTH Korean leader Kim Jong-un has praised the welcome the South gave his sister and said it was important to build on the Olympics-driven momentum for dialogue on the divided peninsula.

Kim’s younger sister Kim Yo-jong – one of his closest confidante­s – was part of the nuclear-armed North’s diplomatic delegation to the Games that made worldwide headlines. She delivered his invitation for the South’s President Moon Jae-in to come to a summit in Pyongyang – which he did not immediatel­y accept, saying the “right conditions” were needed.

The North is subject to multiple sets of UN Security Council sanctions over its banned nuclear and ballistic missile programs, and conducted dozens of weapons tests last year. But the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchan­g have triggered extraordin­ary scenes, with Moon and Kim cheering a unified Korean women’s ice hockey team together – along with the North’s head of state Kim Yong-nam – and attending a concert by Pyongyang’s artistes.

Even so, analysts warn that the positive mood could evaporate quickly after the Games, when the US and South are due to hold major joint military exercises that always infuriate the North.

Kim Jong-un met the delegation on Monday after it returned to Pyongyang, the official KCNA news agency reported. It indirectly cited Kim as saying it was important to enhance “the warm climate of reconcilia­tion and dialogue” created by the Winter Olympics – which for months the North refused to say whether it would attend. He gave instructio­ns for “practical measures” to do so, it added, without giving details.

The South’s appreciati­on of the North’s presence and the welcome it gave its representa­tives were “impressive”, he said, thanking Seoul for its “sincere efforts”.

The KCNA report is the first official reaction from Kim – the third generation of the dynasty to rule the isolated and impoverish­ed North – since his sister’s charm offensive in the South.

Kim Yo-jong’s visit made her the first member of the family to set foot in the country since the end of the Korean War.

Every detail of her trip was scrutinise­d, from the clothes she wore and her facial expression­s to the bag she was carrying and even her handwritin­g. But it left South Koreans divided, with some hoping it might usher in a real opportunit­y for reconcilia­tion while others angrily burned the North Korean flag and criticised Moon for being too soft on Pyongyang.

How deep the rapprochem­ent runs, how far it will go and how long it will last once the Games are over remain very open to question, analysts say.

 ?? YONHAP/AFP ?? South Korean President Moon Jae-in (right) talks with North Korean leader Kim Jongun’s sister Kim Yo-jong as they watch a concert of Pyongyang’s Samjiyon Orchestra at a national theatre in Seoul on Sunday.
YONHAP/AFP South Korean President Moon Jae-in (right) talks with North Korean leader Kim Jongun’s sister Kim Yo-jong as they watch a concert of Pyongyang’s Samjiyon Orchestra at a national theatre in Seoul on Sunday.
 ?? JIM WATSON/AFP ?? A police officer stands next to his motorbike in Baltimore on November 29.
JIM WATSON/AFP A police officer stands next to his motorbike in Baltimore on November 29.

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