Cape Times

Fresh hopes for end to Korean nuclear tension

Top South security official believes Kim Jong-un’s pledge to disarm

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SOUTH Korean security officials may visit North Korea to finalise details ahead of the first summit since 2007, where the South hopes the North will confirm a commitment to give up its nuclear programme, a South Korean official said yesterday.

After meeting North Korean leader Kim Jong-un in Pyongyang last month, South Korea’s national security adviser and spy chief said Kim was committed to denucleari­sing the Korean peninsula and had expressed a willingnes­s to meet US President Donald Trump.

The two sides were due to hold “working-level” talks today and then South Korea’s intelligen­ce chief, Suh Hoon, or its national security adviser, Chung Eui-yong, could visit the North to finish off preparatio­ns, if deemed necessary, South Korean presidenti­al chief of staff, Im Jongseok, told reporters.

The April 27 summit between South Korean President Moon Jae-in and Kim is scheduled to take place in Panmunjom, which is on the NorthSouth border.

That is expected to be followed by a meeting between Kim and Trump late next month or in early June, which would mark the first meeting between sitting leaders of the two countries.

“Even though our special envoys confirmed his denucleari­sation will, it is entirely different if the two leaders confirm it directly among themselves and put that into text,” Im said.

“We expect the summit will confirm the denucleari­sation will (of North Korea), and hope to have a comprehens­ive agreement with the North on the matter,” he said.

Reclusive North Korea has been pursuing nuclear and missile programmes in defiance of UN Security Council sanctions.

It conducted its most powerful nuclear test last year and has sought to develop a missile capable of hitting the US mainland.

But Kim has changed course since the beginning of the year, sending a delegation to the Winter Olympics held in South Korea in February and agreeing to discuss with South Korea and the US nuclear programmes which the North has defended as a necessary deterrent against “US invasion”.

The two Koreas are discussing the wording of a joint statement that could be released at the summit, Im said.

Moon has been reviewing a framework of the statement which could be called the April 27 declaratio­n or the Panmunjom declaratio­n, he said.

The statement will likely focus on issues of denucleari­sation and peace on the Korean peninsula, and an improvemen­t in relations not only between the two Koreas but also with other countries including the US.

“This summit is significan­t because it will set the stage for the North Korea-US summit, and even a possible three-way summit between the countries,” Im said.

“Without US support and agreement, it will be difficult to follow through on inter-Korean agreements.”

Any joint statement is unlikely to include economic co-operation with the North, Im said.

UN Security Council sanctions imposed since North Korea’s first nuclear test in 2006 and strengthen­ed over the past decade aim to cut North Korea off from internatio­nal trade. The two Koreas agreed last month to install a hotline for their leaders to help defuse military tension and facilitate consultati­on.

The telephone line could be operationa­l by this coming Friday, but it is not clear when Moon and Kim would use it for the first time, Im said.

The two leaders will meet at Peace House, a South Korean building inside Panmunjom, making Kim the first North Korean leader to set foot in the South since the 1950-53 Korean War.

Discussion­s are under way about live coverage of part of the meeting, Im said.

North Korea and the rich, democratic South are technicall­y still at war because the Korean War ended in a truce, not a peace treaty. The US stations 28 500 troops in South Korea as a legacy of the conflict. – Reuters

 ?? PICTURE: HWANG GWANG-MO/YONHAP VIA AP) ?? South Korean presidenti­al chief of staff Im Jong-seok speaks during a press conference at the presidenti­al Blue House in Seoul, South Korea, yesterday. Im told reporters that it would be critical to get the North Korean leader to directly confirm his...
PICTURE: HWANG GWANG-MO/YONHAP VIA AP) South Korean presidenti­al chief of staff Im Jong-seok speaks during a press conference at the presidenti­al Blue House in Seoul, South Korea, yesterday. Im told reporters that it would be critical to get the North Korean leader to directly confirm his...

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