The Press

South Korea’s Moon plans to send envoy to N Korea soon

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SOUTH KOREA: President Moon Jae-in plans to send a special envoy to North Korea soon to set up more meaningful dialogue between the rivals that Seoul hopes will eventually include discussion­s over disarming the North of nuclear weapons.

Seoul’s presidenti­al office said Moon revealed the plans to President Donald Trump in a 30-minute telephone conversati­on late Thursday. The office did not say how Trump reacted.

North Korean officials visiting the South for the recently concluded Pyeongchan­g Winter Olympics have said leader Kim Jong Un wants to hold a summit with Moon and that North Korea aims to open talks with the United States.

North Korea sent around 500 people to the Olympics, including high-level officials, athletes, artists, journalist­s and cheerleade­rs in part of conciliato­ry gestures with the South that brought a temporary lull to tensions surroundin­g the North’s nuclear program.

Experts say the North’s outreach over the Olympics shows its ambition to break out of diplomatic isolation and pressure by improving relations with the South and using that as a bridge to approach the United States.

Visiting as a special envoy, Kim Yo Jong, the sister of Kim Jong Un, told Moon that her brother wishes to meet Moon in North Korea soon. Kim Yong Chol, a vice chairman of North Korea’s ruling Workers’ Party Central Committee, during his talks with Moon said the North had ‘‘ample intentions’' of holding talks with the United States.

Moon hasn’t committed to a summit, saying that the Koreas must first create an ‘‘environmen­t’' for that to happen. Trump has responded to North Korea’s overture by saying that talks with North Korea will happen only if conditions are right, starting with North Korea making a clear commitment to eliminate its nuclear and missile programs.

 ??  ?? South Korean President Moon Jae-in
South Korean President Moon Jae-in

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