The Borneo Post

Top North Korean official to visit South for Winter Olympics

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SEOUL: North Korea’s ceremonial head of state will visit the South this week and attend the Winter Olympics opening ceremony as the divided peninsula witnesses a rare thaw after a year of high tensions over Pyongyang’s nuclear programme.

Kim Yong-Nam will technicall­y be the most senior official from the North ever to travel to the other side of the Demilitari­sed Zone that has for decades divided the two Koreas.

His trip will be the diplomatic high point of the rapprochem­ent between the two Koreas triggered by the Pyeongchan­g Olympics in the South, which have their opening ceremony on Friday — although analysts warn that their newly warmed relations may not last long beyond the Games.

The North’s Olympic participat­ion would include a visit by a high-level delegation, they agreed.

It will be led by Kim Yong-Nam, who is leader of the Presidium of the Supreme People’s Assembly, the North’s ruling party- controlled parliament, Seoul’s unificatio­n ministry said in a statement late Sunday.

Kim — who is not a close blood relative of leader Kim Jong- Un — will arrive on Friday for a threeday visit, accompanie­d by three other officials and 18 support staff, the ministry added it had been told by Pyongyang.

The North’s state-run news agency KCNA said the group would ‘soon visit south Korea to attend the opening ceremony of the 23rd Winter Olympics’.

US Vice President Mike Pence will also be present at the same event.

As the nominal head of state, Kim Yong-Nam will technicall­y be the highest-level Northern official ever to visit the South, but he is largely considered a figurehead whose public diplomatic role leaves it unclear how much political power he really has.

He previously led the North’s delegation­s to the 2008 Beijing Olympics and 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics, but does not hold the title of national president — and nor does leader Kim Jong-Un.

Instead it is retained by Kim Jong- Un’s grandfathe­r, the North’s founder Kim Il- Sung, who remains Eternal President of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea — the country’s official name — despite dying in 1994.

Kim Yong-Nam’s official status is high enough to warrant a meeting with South Korean President Moon Jae-In under diplomatic protocol, said Cheong Seong- Chang, analyst at the Sejong Institute think tank.

“At least in the North’s party hierarchy, Kim Yong-Nam is the second-highest official right below Kim Jong-Un,” he said.

“I’d see it as a sign of determinat­ion by Kim Jong- Un to improve inter-Korea ties.”

If they do meet, Kim Yong-Nam could invite Moon to Pyongyang for future summit with Kim Jong-Un, he added.

Moon has long argued for engagement to bring the North to the negotiatin­g table over its nuclear ambitions, which have seen it subjected to multiple sets of United Nations Security Council sanctions.

Seoul and Washington have agreed to delay annual large-scale joint military exercises which always infuriate Pyongyang, but only until the end of the Paralympic­s in late March. — AFP

 ??  ?? Workers put final touches on a PyeongChan­g 2018 Winter Olympic Games themed artwork in PyeongChan­g. — AFP photo
Workers put final touches on a PyeongChan­g 2018 Winter Olympic Games themed artwork in PyeongChan­g. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Kim Yong Nam
Kim Yong Nam

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