The Phnom Penh Post

Rumours rife of Kim visit to China

- Laurent Thomet

SPECULATIO­N that Kim Jong-un visited Beijing on his first-ever foreign trip as North Korea’s leader was rife on Tuesday after Japanese media reported the arrival and departure of a special train met by an honour guard.

Heightened security at possible venues for a highlevel meeting, motorcades driven under police escort, and a non-denial from Chinese authoritie­s also fuelled the belief that Kim had come to pay his respects to President Xi Jinping.

If confirmed, it would mark Kim’s first trip abroad since coming to power in 2011 and signal an intriguing twist in a rapid diplomatic thaw that has opened the door to separate summits between Kim and the presidents of South Korea and the United States.

Japan’s Kyodo news agency reported the train’s departure from a Beijing station but

said it was not clear if Kim was aboard, a day after its arrival sparked rampant speculatio­n about the mystery passenger’s identity.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying sidesteppe­d a request to confirm if Kim or another high-level North Korean official was visit- ing, saying she was “not aware” of the situation. “If we have informatio­n, we will publish it,” Hua said, while adding that China was willing to work with North Korea to “continue to play a positive and constructi­ve role in order to realise the denucleari­sation of the peninsula”.

Some analysts had suggested China – the North’s only major ally – had been sidelined by Pyongyang’s approaches to Seoul and Washington, but a visit by Kim would put Beijing firmly back at the centre of the diplomatic scrum.

Bill Bishop, publisher of the Sinocism China Newsletter, said Xi likely wanted to meet Kim before a summit with US President Donald Trump in May.

“They’re concerned about being left out, with the North Koreans directly cutting a deal with the Americans that doesn’t necessaril­y reflect Chinese interests,” Bishop said.

At the Diaoyutai guesthouse, where Kim’s late father Kim Jongil stayed during visits to Beijing, there was an unusually heavy police presence with officers stationed every 50-100 metres in front of the compound.

An AFP photograph­er saw a motorcade of limousines leave the guesthouse under a police escort on Tuesday morning.

There was also heightened security at two possible venues for a high-level meeting – the Great Hall of the People and Zhongnanha­i, the central leadership compound next to Beijing’s Forbidden City.

South Korea’s biggest-selling newspaper Choson Ilbo cited a senior Seoul intelligen­ce official as saying Kim had been the visitor. Other media speculated it might have been Kim’s sister Kim Yo-jong or the country’s head of state, Kim Yong-nam.

The mystery began after Japanese broadcaste­r Nippon TV showed footage of a train – similar to that used for foreign visits by Kim Jong-il – pulling in to Beijing Station and being met by a military honour guard and a convoy of black limousines.

China’s Weibo microblog was censoring searches for Kim Jongun’s name and variations on it Tuesday. Beijing often tightens news controls during sensitive political periods.

South Korean broadcaste­r SBS TV said guests at a hotel in the border city of Dandong, overlookin­g the railway from China to North Korea, had been asked to leave and curtains were drawn across the windows.

Kim Jong-il, known to be fearful of flying, visited China several times on his private armoured train. His visits were confirmed by Chinese and North Korean state media only after he had left the country.

The younger Kim has not undertaken any official trip abroad since taking power after his father’s death in 2011. And he has yet to host a single head of state, having snubbed the president of Mongolia who visited Pyongyang in 2013.

For decades, Beijing has been Pyongyang’s key diplomatic protector and main source of trade and aid, but their relationsh­ip has soured in recent years.

Kim broke with tradition by not travelling to Beijing to pay his respects to Xi after the Chinese leader came to power, and Beijing has become increasing­ly frustrated with its neighbour’s nuclear weapons program – showing a new willingnes­s to agree to, and enforce, tougher UN sanctions. At the same time, Beijing fears the collapse of the regime in Pyongyang and the instabilit­y it would bring, potentiall­y sending waves of refugees into China and the possibilit­y of US troops stationed on its border in a unified Korea.

High-level inter-Korean talks are scheduled for Thursday to pave the way for a summit between Kim and South Korean President Moon Jae-in in April. Discussion­s have also begun on a possible summit with Trump in May.

 ??  ?? LIFESTYLE
LIFESTYLE
 ?? JUNG YEON-JE/AFP ?? A man watches a news report about a suspected visit to China by North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, in Seoul, on Tuesday.
JUNG YEON-JE/AFP A man watches a news report about a suspected visit to China by North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, in Seoul, on Tuesday.
 ?? RAY BERKELMAN/AFP ?? Bleached coral in Australia’s Great Barrier Reef in 2012.
RAY BERKELMAN/AFP Bleached coral in Australia’s Great Barrier Reef in 2012.

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