The Borneo Post (Sabah)

No news on Trump-Kim summit as North Korea wraps up Sweden talks

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STOCKHOLM: North Korean officials wrapped up three days of talks with Swedish counterpar­ts with no indication their efforts cleared the way for a mooted nuclear summit between US President Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un, as a senior Pyongyang diplomat headed to Finland yesterday for further meetings.

The North’s state KCNA news agency said Sunday the Stockholm talks had discussed ‘bilateral relations and other issues of mutual concern’, without providing further detail.

The meetings in Sweden came a week after Trump agreed to a summit proposal relayed by South Korean envoys who met Kim Jong Un in Pyongyang.

His response triggered a race to set a credible agenda for what would be historic talks between the two leaders. But no specific time or venue has been set and North Korea has yet to confirm it even made the offer to meet.

Choe Kang Il, deputy director for North American affairs at Pyongyang’s foreign ministry, was seen at Beijing airport Sunday departing for Finland, where he is expected to hold talks with former US ambassador to Seoul Kathleen Stephens, multiple media reports said.

Earlier reports had listed Choe among the North’s delegation to Sweden.

Choe, experience­d in negotiatio­ns with the US, is expected to meet the retired US diplomat as well as other retired South Korean diplomats, the South’s Yonhap news agency said, citing an unnamed diplomatic source.

“But no current US or South Korean officials will be there,” Yonhap quoted the source in Seoul as saying.

In Stockholm, the Swedes were seeking to pave the way for talks which could end a threat of nuclear war, using the leverage of their longstandi­ng ties with Pyongyang, where its diplomatic mission opened in 1975, the first Western embassy to be establishe­d in the hermit country.

The embassy today represents US, Canadian and Australian diplomatic interests, giving Sweden a key liaison role and facilitati­ng the talks in Stockholm between Swedish Foreign Minister Margot Wallstrom and counterpar­t Ri Yong Ho.

Ri also met with Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Lofven, who Friday said Sweden hoped to be a summit ‘facilitato­r’.

A senior US administra­tion official told AFP Friday no US government staff would be meeting with the North Koreans in Sweden, where Ri was stationed as a diplomat for three years in the mid 1980s.

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