The Asian Age

S. Korea approves North deals amid conservati­ve opposition

-

Seoul, Oct. 23: South Korea’s liberal President on Tuesday formally approved his recent reconcilia­tion deals with North Korean leader Kim Jong- un, triggering immediate backlash from conservati­ves who called him “self- righteous” and “subservien­t” to the North.

President Moon Jae- in's move is largely seen as an effort to show he’s determined to carry out the deals despite growing skepticism about whether his engagement policy could eventually lead to North Korea's nuclear disarmamen­t.

Mr Moon “ratified” the deals on Tuesday afternoon, hours after his Cabinet approved them during a regular meeting, his office said.

The back- to- back endorsemen­ts came with no prior parliament­ary endorsemen­t. In South Korea, a President is allowed by law to ratify some agreements with North Korea without consents from lawmakers.

At the start of the Cabinet meeting, Moon said in televised remarks that the ratificati­on would help further improve ties with North Korea and accelerate global efforts to achieve the “complete denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula.”

The main conservati­ve opposition Liberty Korea Party criticized Moon's action, saying the deals would only undermine national security and waste taxpayers' money.

“We deplore the fact that the Moon Jae- in government is weighted toward its subservien­t North Korea policy and is consistent­ly being self- righteous and lacking communicat­ion” with Parliament, said party spokesman Yoon Young- seok.

Moon Jae- in’s move is largely seen as an effort to show he’s determined to carry out the deals despite growing skepticism about whether his engagement policy could eventually lead to N. Korea’s nuclear disarmamen­t

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India