Waterloo Region Record

Trump, Kim talks draw range of emotions from Korean-Canadians

Many in the community are struck by the president turning on its ally Canada while not questionin­g the conduct of this dictator

- MICHELLE MCQUIGGE — With files from the Associated Press.

Members of Canada’s Korean community are watching the evolving relationsh­ip between U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korea’s leader with feelings that range from fascinatio­n to anxiety.

Trump lavished praise on Kim Jong Un during a historic summit in Singapore while continuing trade-related attacks on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and some Koreans who now call Canada home say they’re struck by how the president seems to be turning on an ally while failing to question the conduct of a dictator.

At least one group of former North Koreans now living in Canada say Trump’s new willingnes­s to foster closer ties with Kim are dangerous, and criticized the president for focusing on denucleari­zation rather than seeking answers about human rights in the country.

Another resident, however, finds the situation intriguing, saying he hopes it bridges the divide on the Korean Peninsula and allows families to reunite.

Trudeau has offered support for Trump’s discussion­s with Kim, but has steadfastl­y declined to weigh in on the president’s fulsome praise of the North Korean leader and the intensifyi­ng verbal barbs thrown in his direction.

Rocky Kim, president of the Canada Federation of North Korean Defectors, joined internatio­nal voices around the world questionin­g Trump’s approach with the North Korean leader.

“Trump, he has to make the agenda on the table about North Korean human rights,” he said in a telephone interview. “Denucleari­zation is very important, however ... there’s nothing detailed. So we don’t know what’s going to happen.”

The statements emerging from Trump’s summit with the North Korean leader have been criticized as vague. The details of how and when North Korea would denucleari­ze as promised appear yet to be determined.

North Korea is believed to possess more than 50 nuclear warheads, with its atomic program spread across more than 100 sites constructe­d over decades to evade internatio­nal inspection­s.

Rocky Kim, who describes the North Korean leader as an intelligen­t and crafty negotiator, said failing to secure firm pledges was both a mistake and a missed opportunit­y to seek some transparen­cy on affairs in the country that has long functioned behind a curtain of secrecy.

But Toronto chef and writer Sang Kim struck a more hopeful note, saying the talks with Trump build upon a key meeting with the South Korean president earlier in the year.

The two summits in tandem, he said, signal a shift in the long and contention­s relationsh­ip between the two Koreas and may spark hope for families who remain estranged by the “arbitrary border” between the two regions.

“Every single Korean family that I know personally have some member of their family ... who have been separated from others,” he said. “To me the conjoining or the return to one another is a very, very necessary path to ultimate healing for that peninsula.”

Sang Kim also noted the deepening contrast between Trump’s treatment of Kim Jong Un and Trudeau.

Trump called the North Korean leader “worthy,” “smart” and “talented” after the Singapore summit while days earlier describing Trudeau as “dishonest and weak” following a G7 summit in Quebec.

The president even took shots at Canada while in Singapore over what he has described as unfair trade tariffs and the country’s supply management system.

“It’s very unfair, and it’s very unfair to our workers, and I’m gonna straighten it out. And it won’t even be tough,” Trump said Tuesday.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? President Donald Trump declared success after signing a document with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. He described the text as a “very comprehens­ive” agreement which would “take care of a very big and very dangerous problem for the world,” though it...
GETTY IMAGES President Donald Trump declared success after signing a document with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. He described the text as a “very comprehens­ive” agreement which would “take care of a very big and very dangerous problem for the world,” though it...

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