The Star Malaysia

North swaps mushrooms for tangerines from South

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SEOUL: South Korea has sent 200 tonnes of tangerines to the North in return for mushrooms Pyongyang gave earlier, Seoul said, in the latest reconcilia­tory gesture between the neighbours.

Seoul is pushing ahead with a rapprochem­ent with the nuclear-armed North while its security ally the US insists pressure on Pyongyang should be maintained until it denucleari­ses.

The tangerines – a rarity in the North – were being airlifted to Pyongyang from the southern island of Jeju, where they were grown, in four flights, the last one due yesterday afternoon.

The fruits reciprocat­e two tonnes of pine mushrooms sent by the North’s leader Kim Jong-un during his September summit with the South’s President Moon Jae-in, Seoul’s presidenti­al office said.

The pine mushrooms – a delicacy claimed to help prevent heart dis- eases and diabetes, and a key Northern export to China – were distribute­d to Southern families separated from relatives in the North.

“Tangerines are a speciality of the South that ordinary North Koreans normally don’t have access to,” Moon’s spokesman said on Sunday.

His office did not elaborate on the fruits’ value but local media, citing local tangerine prices, estimated it at about 400 to 500 million won (RM1.5mil-RM1.8mil).

Opposition politician­s were critical.

“This action runs counter to the current atmosphere of the internatio­nal community,” Liberty Korea Party floor leader Song Hee-kyung said in a statement.

Moon – a dove who advocates dialogue with the North to nudge it toward denucleari­sation negotiatio­ns – has met Kim three times so far and is seeking to hold another summit in Seoul in the near future.

But the peace push has increasing­ly met with scepticism at home and abroad as denucleari­sation talks between Pyongyang and Washington falter.

North Korea last week asked for a planned meeting between US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Kim’s right-hand man Kim Yongchol to be delayed.

No clear explanatio­n was given, but Pyongyang is demanding sanctions imposed on it over its weapons programmes are eased while Washington insists that they should stay in place until the North denucleari­ses.

 ?? — AFP ?? Tangerine peace dream: A South Korean military transport aircraft being loaded with tangerines bound for North Korea at Jeju island.
— AFP Tangerine peace dream: A South Korean military transport aircraft being loaded with tangerines bound for North Korea at Jeju island.

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