The Star Malaysia

S. Korea halts border broadcasts

Propaganda machine switched off ahead of historic Kim-Moon summit

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SEOUL: South Korea has halted the propaganda broadcasts it blares across the border at North Korea ahead of their first summit in a decade, as US President Donald Trump cautions that the nuclear crisis on the peninsula is a long way from being resolved.

North and South Korea are in the final stages of preparatio­ns for a summit between North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and South Korean President Moon Jae-in at the border truce village of Panmunjom on Friday.

Ahead of the summit, North Korea announced it would halt nuclear and missile tests and said it was scrapping its nuclear test site to instead pursue economic growth and peace.

“North Korea’s decision to freeze its nuclear programme is a significan­t decision for the complete denucleari­sation of the Korean peninsula,” Moon said in a regular meeting at the Blue House yesteray.

“It is a green light that raises the chances of positive outcomes at the North’s summits with South Korea and the United States.

“If North Korea goes the path of complete denucleari­sation starting from this, then a bright future for

North Korea can be guaranteed.”

The South’s propaganda broadcasts were stopped at midnight, the defence ministry said, without specifying whether they would resume after the Kim-Moon summit.

“We hope this decision will lead both Koreas to stop mutual criti-

cism and propaganda against each other and also contribute in creating peace and a new beginning,” said the South Korean defence ministry.

It is the first time in more than two years the South Korean broadcasts, which include a mixture of news, South Korean pop music and criticism of the North Korean regime, have been stopped.

North Korea has its own propaganda loudspeake­rs at the border, but a defence ministry official said he could not verify whether the North had stopped its broadcasts.

The inter-Korean talks and a planned meeting between Kim and Trump in the coming weeks have raised hopes of an easing in tensions that reached a crescendo last year amid a flurry of North Korean missile tests and its largest nuclear test.

After initially welcoming Pyongyang’s statement on halting nuclear and missile tests, Trump sounded a more cautious note on Sunday.

“We are a long way from conclusion on North Korea, maybe things will work out, and maybe they won’t – only time will tell,” Trump said on Twitter.

China, North Korea’s main ally, also welcomed the North Korean announceme­nt, but editorials in state-run media yesterday were tempered with notes of caution.

The China Daily, the official English-language newspaper of the Chinese government, said the pledg- es conveyed the message that Kim will sit down for talks as the leader of a legitimate nuclear power.

“Negotiatio­ns about actual nuclear disarmamen­t will likely prove arduous given such weapons are critical to Pyongyang’s sense of security. It will require ironclad security guarantees if it is to relinquish them,” it said.

The Global Times, a hawkish tabloid newspaper run by the ruling Communist Party’s official People’s Daily, said all parties “should cherish this hard-won state of affairs” and continue to make efforts toward peace and denucleari­sation.

“Washington should not regard North Korea’s halt to nuclear and missile tests as a result of its maximum pressure,” the Global Times wrote.

“It must be attributed to multiple factors, one of which is that Pyongyang has mastered certain advanced nuclear technologi­es and successful­ly launched an interconti­nental ballistic missile with a range of more than 10,000km.”

The United States, through the United Nations, has pursued a series of tightening sanctions on North Korea aimed at cutting its access to foreign currency. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Sound of silence: A file picture showing South Korean soldiers adjusting equipment used for propaganda broadcasts near the border area. — AP
Sound of silence: A file picture showing South Korean soldiers adjusting equipment used for propaganda broadcasts near the border area. — AP

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