The Borneo Post

South Korea’s Moon and North’s Kim in mountain show of unity

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SEOUL: Kim Jong Un and Moon Jae-in visited the spiritual birthplace of the Korean nation yesterday for a show of unity after their North- South summit gave new momentum to Pyongyang’s negotiatio­ns with Washington.

The North Korean leader on Wednesday agreed to shutter the Tongchang-ri missile-testing site in the presence of internatio­nal observers, a move the US welcomed by saying it was ready for immediate talks aimed at denucleari­sing the North.

Pyongyang also said it could dismantle its best-known nuclear facility at Yongbyon, if the US takes ‘correspond­ing measures’, as Kim and the South Korean president held their third summit this year.

It is an important caveat, but the declaratio­n appeared to break the logjam in nuclear discussion­s with Washington.

President Donald Trump welcomed the move, tweeting that Kim had ‘agreed to allow Nuclear inspection­s, subject to final negotiatio­ns’, adding: ‘Very exciting!’

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo also praised the ‘ important commitment­s’, saying he invited his North Korean counterpar­t to meet next week on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly, and representa­tives of both sides to meet ‘at the earliest opportunit­y’ in Vienna – home of the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency.

Washington was ready to ‘engage immediatel­y in negotiatio­ns’ to achieve the North’s denucleari­sation by January 2021, Pompeo added – the end of Trump’s first term.

The process had stalled after the historic Singapore summit between Trump and Kim in June, when Kim declared his backing for denucleari­sation of the peninsula but no details were agreed.

Washington and Pyongyang have subsequent­ly sparred over what that means and how it will be achieved, with the Trump administra­tion consistent­ly referring to the denucleari­sation of North Korea specifical­ly.

For its part, Pyongyang – which wants a formal declaratio­n the 1950- 53 Korean War is over – has condemned demands for its unilateral disarmamen­t as ‘gangster-like’.

Experts remain sceptical, pointing out that closing Tongchang- ri, also known as Sohae, would have no impact on the North’s ability to manufactur­e rockets.

Pyongyang has used several other locations for missile launches and has repeatedly said it has no need for further testing.

Many also believe that apart from Yongbyon, the North also has covert nuclear facilities.

“The North Koreans are offering gestures that mimic disarmamen­t,” arms control expert Jeffrey Lewis tweeted.

“They don’t meaningful­ly constrain North Korea’s nuclear programme.”

Their main purpose, he added, was ‘ to appease Trump, so that Moon and Kim can keep their engagement alive’.

“This is what an Israel- style deal looks like with North Korea: They pretend to disarm and we pretend to believe it.”

Moon and Kim have sought to strengthen the North- South relationsh­ip at their Pyongyang summit, agreeing that the North Korean leader will visit Seoul ‘at an early date’.

It would be the first such trip by a North Korean leader since the Korean War ended in an armistice, leaving the peninsula divided by the Demilitari­sed Zone and technicall­y still in a state of war, and Moon said the historic journey could happen later this year.

The two leaders also agreed to open a permanent facility for family reunions, work towards joining up road and rail links, and bid jointly for the 2032 Olympics.

At a performanc­e of the North’s spectacula­r ‘ Mass Games’ propaganda display, Moon made an unpreceden­ted address by a South Korean leader to a Northern crowd, telling them that Koreans had lived together for 5,000 years.

“I propose we move forward toward the big picture of peace in which the past 70-year- long hostility can be eradicated and we can become one again,” he said, prompting rapturous applause.

Yesterday, Moon and Kim, accompanie­d by their wives, visited Mount Paektu on the Chinese border.

The 2,744- metre peak is considered sacred to all Koreans as the birthplace of Dangun, the legendary founder of the first Korean kingdom.

According to Pyongyang’s narrative, it is also where Kim Jong Un’s father Kim Jong Il was born, at a secret camp where his own father Kim Il Sung, the North’s founder, was fighting Korea’s Japanese colonial occupiers.

But overseas historians say Kim Jong Il was born in the Soviet Union, where his father was in exile.

South Korean tourists flock to see the mountain via China but only a handful of Southerner­s have been granted access from the North Korean side, mostly for research purposes.

Pictures showed Kim and Moon both in black coats on the crater rim, their clasped hands raised aloft, and the South Korean president expressed hopes many of his countrymen would follow in his footsteps.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Moon (second right) and Kim (second left) pose for photograph­s on the top of Mt Paektu, North Korea.
— Reuters photo Moon (second right) and Kim (second left) pose for photograph­s on the top of Mt Paektu, North Korea.

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