The Star Malaysia

All systems go for summit

Officials meet to iron out difference­s before today’s talks

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SINGAPORE: US President Donald Trump said his historic summit with North Korean leader Kim Jongun in Singapore could “work out very nicely” as officials from both countries met to narrow difference­s on how to end a nuclear stand-off on the Korean peninsula.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the preparator­y talks were moving quite rapidly “and we anticipate that they will come to their logical conclusion even more quickly than we anticipate­d”.

The summit provides “an unpreceden­ted opportunit­y to change the trajectory of our relationsh­ip and bring peace and prosperity” to North Korea, Pompeo told a news conference on the eve of the summit.

However, he played down the possibilit­y of a quick breakthrou­gh and said the summit should set the framework for “the hard work that will follow”, insisting that North Korea had to move towards complete, verifiable and irreversib­le denucleari­sation.

Sanctions on North Korea would remain in place until that had happened, Pompeo said.

Kim and Trump arrived in tropical Singapore on Sunday for the first ever face-to-face meeting by leaders of two countries that have been enemies since the 1950-1953 Korean War.

Although gaps remain over what denucleari­sation would entail, Trump sounded a positive note in a lunch meeting with Singapore’s Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong.

“We’ve got a very interestin­g meeting ... tomorrow, and I just think it’s going to work out very nicely,” Trump said.

Lobster bisque, beef tenderloin and ice cream were on the lunch menu, and there was also an early birthday cake for Trump, who turns 72 on Thursday.

Kim remained ensconced in the heavily guarded St Regis Hotel, where he is staying.

There was also no sign of his sister, Kim Yo-jong, who has accompanie­d him to Singapore.

Some people were grumbling in the wealthy city-state because of traffic jams caused by the summit and the cost of hosting two leaders with massive security needs.

Lee has said the summit would cost Singapore about S$20mil (RM59.6mil), more than half of which would go on security.

“Thanks PM Lee for spending $20 million of taxpayers money, which can ... help a lot of needy families in Singapore to survive,” posted one Facebook user.

Others complained about the traffic jams.

Lee said the cost was worthwhile. “It is our contributi­on to an internatio­nal endeavour which is in our profound interest,” he told reporters on Sunday.

Trump and Kim are staying in separate hotels in the famous Orchard Road area of Singapore, dotted with high-rise luxury apartment blocks, offices and glittering shopping malls.

Traffic was held up in the steamy midday sun and scores of bystanders were penned in by police when Trump went to meet Lee.

Similar scenes were seen on Sunday when Kim and Trump arrived in the city, and when Kim went to meet Lee. Their hotels were cordoned off with heavy security.

Commenting for the first time on the summit, North Korea’s state-run KCNA news agency earlier said the two sides would exchange “widerangin­g and profound views” to re-set relations.

It heralded the summit as part of a “changed era”.

Many experts on North Korea, one of the most insular and unpredicta­ble countries in the world, remain sceptical Kim will ever completely abandon nuclear weapons.

They believe Kim’s latest engagement is aimed at getting the United States to ease the crippling sanctions that have squeezed the impo- verished country.

A Trump administra­tion official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the US side was entering the talks with a sense of optimism and an equal dose of scepticism given North Korea’s long history of developing nuclear weapons.

“We will not be surprised by any scenario,” said the official.

 ??  ?? Huge draw: Curious onlookers waiting for the departure of Trump’s motorcade from the Presidenti­al Palace in Singapore.
Huge draw: Curious onlookers waiting for the departure of Trump’s motorcade from the Presidenti­al Palace in Singapore.
 ??  ?? Top-read story: Commuters reading the news of Kim’s arrival in Singapore at a subway station in Pyongyang, North Korea.
Top-read story: Commuters reading the news of Kim’s arrival in Singapore at a subway station in Pyongyang, North Korea.

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