The Asian Age

Kim ‘ deeply moved’ by South Korean K- pop concert

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Seoul, April 2: North Korean leader Kim Jong Un smiled, clapped and said he was “deeply moved” by a rare performanc­e by South Korean K- pop stars in Pyongyang, state media reported on Monday.

The high profile appearance of Kim and his wife, former singer Ri Sol Ju, at the concert was unusual as his authoritar­ian regime typically struggles to prevent any infiltrati­on of the South’s pop culture among his isolated people.

Kim, the first North Korean leader ever to attend a show by entertaine­rs from the South, shook hands with the performers and “expressed his deep thanks to them,” the North’s official KCNA news agency reported.

“He said that he was deeply moved to see our people sincerely acclaiming the performanc­e, deepening the understand­ing of the popular art of the South's side,” KCNA said. The visit by the South’s entertaine­rs, seen as part of a cultural charm offensive by Seoul, comes as a diplomatic thaw gathers pace on the peninsula ahead of a landmark interKorea­n summit later this month.

Kim said he was likely to be busy “because of his complicate­d political program early in April,” so he was glad to make it to the concert which he credited with bringing the “spring of peace”.

The 120- member South Korean group -- 11 musical acts as well as dancers, technician­s and martial artists -gave one concert on Sunday with another set for Tuesday.

Kim and his wife were seen clapping their hands during the twohour Sunday event, which was also attended by Kim's younger sister, Kim Yo Jong, and the North's ceremonial head of state Kim Yong Nam. The concert at the elaboratel­y decorated 1,500- seat East Pyongyang Grand Theatre ended with a standing ovation by the audience after a finale featuring all the stars singing a song about unificatio­n.

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