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Korea leaders parade through Pyongyang ahead of nuclear talks

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SEOUL — Tens of thousands of North Koreans chanted “Unificatio­n!” and waved flowers as their leader Kim Jong Un and South Korean President Moon Jaein paraded through Pyongyang on Tuesday, ahead of a summit aimed at rekindling stalled nuclear diplomacy.

Mr. Kim greeted Mr. Moon with hugs and smiles as the South Korean leader arrived in the North’s capital to revive momentum in the faltering talks between Washington and Pyongyang over denucleari­zation and the prospect of officially ending the Korean War.

A massive welcome ceremony at Pyongyang Internatio­nal Airport featured a large, goose-stepping honor guard and a military band.

Afterwards, the two leaders travelled in a black Mercedes limousine with open-top rear seats to the Paekhwawon State Guest House, where Mr. Moon will stay during his three-day visit.

Mr. Kim and Mr. Moon briefly stepped out of the vehicle to greet and take flowers from people in the crowds who waved flags and shouted “Motherland! Unificatio­n!”

Clean streets and high rise buildings were seen as the motorcade passed Ryomyong Street, a new residentia­l district launched last year under Mr. Kim’s initiative to modernise the city.

Mr. Kim and Mr. Moon will hold formal talks from 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. (0630 to 0800 GMT), Mr. Moon’s office said.

The inter-Korean summit, the third between Mr. Moon and Mr. Kim, will be a litmus test for another meeting Mr. Kim has recently proposed to US President Donald Trump.

Mr. Trump has asked Mr. Moon to be “chief negotiator” between himself and Mr. Kim, according to Mr. Moon’s aides, after Mr. Trump cancelled a trip to Pyongyang by his secretary of state last month.

Washington wants to see concrete action toward denucleari­zation by North Korea before agreeing to a key goal of Pyongyang — declaring an end to the 1950-53 Korean War.

“If North Korea-US dialogue is restarted after this visit, it would have much significan­ce in itself,” Mr. Moon said before his departure.

Underscori­ng the challenges ahead, North Korea’s official Rodong Sinmun said on Tuesday “the responsibi­lity falls squarely on the United States” for the stalled nuclear discussion­s.

“It is due to its nonsensica­l, irrational stubbornne­ss that other issues can only be discussed after our country has completely verifiably, irreversib­ly dismantled our nuclear capabiliti­es… without showing the intention to build trust including declaring the end of war,” the newspaper said in an editorial.

Mr. Moon, himself the offspring of a family displaced by the war, has met Mr. Kim twice this year at the border village of Panmunjom.

Traveling with him are South Korean business tycoons, including Samsung scion Jay Y. Lee and the chiefs of SK Group and LG Group. They will meet with North Korean Deputy Prime Minister Ri Ryong Nam, who is in charge of economic affairs.

On Wednesday, Mr. Moon and Mr. Kim plan to hold a second round of officials talks after which they are expected to unveil a joint statement, and a separate military pact designed to defuse tensions and prevent armed clashes.

Mr. Moon will return home early Thursday.

This week’s summit comes as the United States presses other countries to strictly observe United Nations sanctions aimed at choking off funding for Pyongyang’s nuclear and ballistic missile programs.

North Korea says it has destroyed its main nuclear and missile engine test site, and has halted atomic and ballistic missile tests but US officials and analysts believe it is continuing to work on its weapons plans covertly.

US Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley accused Russia on Monday of “cheating” on UN sanctions on North Korea.

Mr. Moon is hoping to engineer a proposal that combines a framework for the North’s denucleari­zation and a joint declaratio­n ending the Korean War, Seoul officials said.

The conflict ended with an armistice, not a peace treaty, leaving US-led UN forces including South Korea technicall­y still at war with the North.

But US officials remain “unenthusia­stic” about declaring an end to the war without any substantia­l action toward denucleari­zation from the North, Seoul officials said.

South Korea is pinning high hopes on Mr. Kim’s remarks to Mr. Moon’s special envoys earlier this month that he wants to achieve denucleari­zation within Mr. Trump’s first term in office ending in early 2021.

Agreeing on a timetable is a core task for Mr. Moon, as it would induce US action, said Lee Jung-chul, a professor at Soongsil University in Seoul.

“Given US scepticism that South Korea may have oversold Mr. Kim’s willingnes­s to denucleari­ze, how President Mr. Moon delivers his sincerity toward denucleari­zation to Mr. Trump would be a key factor for the fate of their second summit,” Mr. Lee told a forum on Monday in Seoul. —

 ?? AFP ?? NORTH KOREAN LEADER Kim Jong Un (right) and South Korean President Moon Jae-in (left) wave to Pyongyang citizens from an open-topped limousine as they drive through Pyongyang in this Sept. 18 photo.
AFP NORTH KOREAN LEADER Kim Jong Un (right) and South Korean President Moon Jae-in (left) wave to Pyongyang citizens from an open-topped limousine as they drive through Pyongyang in this Sept. 18 photo.

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