The Borneo Post

N. Korea ‘willing to denucleari­se’, says Moon

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SEOUL: North Korea is ‘willing to denucleari­se’ and the US is prepared to end hostile relations, President Moon Jae-in said yesterday as he struck an upbeat tone ahead of his third meeting with Kim Jong Un next week.

The summit will be the third between the leaders of North and South Korea this year and comes as talks between Washington and Pyongyang over dismantlin­g the North’s nuclear arsenal have stalled.

Moon conceded there was a ‘blockage’ and both sides needed to compromise to make progress on the controvers­ial subject.

“North Korea is willing to denucleari­se and therefore willing to discard existing nuclear weapons... and the US is willing to end hostile relations with the North and provide security guarantees,” Moon said.

“But there is a blockage as both sides are demanding each other to act first and I think they will be able to find a point of compromise.”

Moon, who helped broker the June summit between Kim and US President Donald Trump and has called for a follow-up meeting between the two sides, added South Korea would help mediate contacts between Washington and Pyongyang to ‘speed up the denucleari­sation process’.

Trump and Kim Jong Un pledged to denucleari­se the Korean peninsula at their historic Singapore meeting.

However, no details were agreed, and Washington and Pyongyang have sparred since over what that means and how it will be achieved. Last month, Trump abruptly cancelled a planned visit by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to Pyongyang.

The new US envoy for the North, Stephen Biegun, said in August Kim had promised ‘ final, fully verified denucleari­sation’ at the Singapore summit.

But Pyongyang has slammed Washington for its ‘gangster-like’ demands for complete, verifiable and irreversib­le disarmamen­t.

South Korea’s Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha said yesterday that making progress on denucleari­sation talks with North Korea is a ‘daily concern’.

“Getting traction on the denucleari­sation and peace process that is very much now in motion – it’s a daily concern to get movement on this,” she told a regional economic forum in the Vietnamese capital Hanoi.

Speaking on the sidelines of the forum, Kang called for “openness” from the North about their weapons programme and added a second Trump-Kim summit should deliver ‘concrete’ results.

“A second summit has to be something that really significan­tly moves the agenda forward,” she added.

The White House said earlier this week Trump had received a ‘very positive’ letter from Kim seeking a follow-up meeting, since adding it is in the process of coordinati­ng a possible second meeting between the two leaders.

South Korean national security advisor Chung Euiyong said Thursday Moon and Kim will discuss ‘more in- depth and detailed ways to achieve denucleari­sation’.

The two Koreas will be holding a closed working-level meeting today to discuss the logistics of next week’s summit, an official at the South’s presidenti­al office said. — AFP

 ??  ?? Pedestrian­s walk past a giant banner showing a picture of the summit handshake between Moon and Kim at Seoul City Hall. — AFP photo
Pedestrian­s walk past a giant banner showing a picture of the summit handshake between Moon and Kim at Seoul City Hall. — AFP photo

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