The Phnom Penh Post

China’s Xi meets N Korea’s Kim ahead of Trump talks

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NORTH Korean leader Kim Jong-un welcomed Chinese President Xi Jinping to Pyongyang on Thursday on a historic visit to burnish an uneasy alliance, with the two men each facing challenges of their own with US President Donald Trump.

Xi is the first Chinese president to visit North Korea in 14 years, after relations between the Cold War era allies deteriorat­ed over Pyongyang’s nuclear provocatio­ns and Beijing’s subsequent backing of UN sanctions.

But as he embarked on a flurry of diplomacy last year, Kim ensured that Xi – the leader of his country’s key diplomatic supporter and main provider of trade and aid – was the first head of state he met.

The North Korean has visited his older ally four times in China and Pyongyang has been increasing­ly keen for Xi to reciprocat­e, while according to diplomats Beijing has been biding its time to see how nuclear talks between Kim and Trump play out.

But Beijing’s own trade negotiatio­ns with Washington hit a wall last month and some analysts say Xi is now looking for leverage ahead of his meeting with Trump at next week’s G20 summit in Japan.

“When both China & North Korea are confronted by US, they have a lot to discuss with each other,” Lijian Zhao, the deputy chief of mission of China’s embassy in Pakistan, wrote on Twitter.

Kim met Xi at Pyongyang airport as he began a two-day state visit with his wife Peng Liyuan, Foreign Minister Wang Yi, and other officials, according to Chinese state media.

Portraits of the two leaders stood outside the terminal, pictures showed, and a 21-gun salute was fired.

Chinese f lags hung throughout the capital and hundreds of thousands of resident s were l i ned up a long t he streets according to CCTV – standard procedure when a foreign leader visits the isolated North, whose authoritie­s a re adept at mounting spectacu la r displays.

But in an unpreceden­ted move, Xi was welcomed at the Kumsusan Pal

ace, the mausoleum where the preser ved bodies of the North’s founder Kim Il-sung and successor Kim Jongil – t he grandfathe­r and fat her of t he current leader – lie in state.

Kim and Xi went on to hold formal talks, Xinhua reported.

Symbolic visit

The Rodong Sinmun newspaper, the mouthpiece of the ruling party, devoted t he top half of its front page to t he v i sit, w it h a colou r pic t u re of X i accompanyi­ng a profile.

In an editorial, it said the trip at a time of “complex internatio­nal relations” showed that the leadership in Beijing attached “high importance on the DPRK-China friendship”.

“Our people are proud of having a trustworth­y and close friend like the Chinese people,” it added.

Xi’s visit will be largely symbolic, with no formal joint communique expected – as was the case with Kim’s April summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Vladivosto­k, Russia.

Authoritie­s have imposed tight restrictio­ns on coverage. Internatio­nal journalist­s in Pyongyang were told they would not be able to cover it, while foreign media organisati­ons initially invited to attend proved unable to secure visas.

Sources said the Chinese media delegation accompanyi­ng Xi was also reduced in size from initial plans.

The North wants to demonstrat­e to Trump that it has China’s support with nuclear negotiatio­ns at a standstill after Trump and Kim’s second summit broke up without a deal.

In Hanoi in February the two men disagreed in Febr uar y on what Pyongyang would be willing to give up in exchange for sanctions relief.

For t he North t he v isit “will ser ve to show the US that China has its back and to send a message to Washington it should stop its maximum pressure posture”, said Lim Eul-chul, professor of North Korean studies at Kyungnam Universit y.

Analysts say the trip is equally a chance for China to showcase its influence in the region and the talks process, at a time when it is at loggerhead­s with the US over trade.

“Xi wants everyone to remain acutely aware that he can influence Kim, and that no comprehens­ive, durable deal with North Korea can occur without China’s assistance – and approval,” Scott Seaman, Asia director of the Eurasia Group consultanc­y, said in a research note.

 ?? ED JONES/AFP ?? Two men sit holding North Korean and Chinese flags near Kim Il-sung square in Pyongyang on Thursday, as Chinese President Xi Jinping visits the country.
ED JONES/AFP Two men sit holding North Korean and Chinese flags near Kim Il-sung square in Pyongyang on Thursday, as Chinese President Xi Jinping visits the country.

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