Manila Bulletin

S. Korea team to fly North to discuss summit details

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SEOUL (AFP) — A high-level South Korean delegation will fly to North Korea this week to discuss arrangemen­ts for an inter-Korean summit there this month, as relations grow cooler between Washington and Pyongyang.

The South’s President Moon Jae-in Sunday named his top security adviser as a special envoy to the North to discuss details before Moon’s planned meeting in Pyongyang with Kim JongUn.

Chung Eui-yong, head of the presidenti­al National Security Office, will lead a five-member delegation to the North’s capital on Wednesday, Moon’s spokesman Kim Eui-kyeom told reporters.

The delegation, which also includes South Korea’s spy chief Suh Hoon, will fly to Pyongyang via a rare direct route across the inter-Korean border for their day trip.

It will be Chung’s second visit to the North since March, when he headed the same five-member team to arrange the first summit between Moon and Kim and met Kim Jong-Un.

The spokesman said it was unclear whether the delegation would meet the North’s leader this time around.

Moon and Kim have met face-to-face twice now, the first during a historic summit at the border truce village of Panmunjom in April.

It was the first time a North Korean leader had crossed into the South since the 1950-53 war sealed the division of the Korean peninsula.

They met a second time in Panmunjom in May as they scrambled to salvage plans for a summit between Kim and US President Donald Trump in Singapore, which eventually went ahead on June 12.

Moon and Kim have since agreed to hold a third summit in Pyongyang at an unspecifie­d date in September.

The rapid rapprochem­ent on the Korean peninsula led to the landmark meeting between Kim and Trump in June, which the US leader touted as a historic breakthrou­gh.

At the summit the pair reached a vague agreement to work towards the “complete denucleari­zation of the Korean peninsula,” but there has been little movement since.

Pyongyang has slammed the US for its “gangster-like” demands for complete, verifiable and irreversib­le disarmamen­t, and the UN’s Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency reported there was no indication that the North had stopped its nuclear activities.

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