Daily Dispatch

Nobel trio join trip to North Korea

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THREE Nobel laureates will take part in a “humanitari­an” visit to North Korea later this month, even as suspicions grow that Pyongyang is preparing to carry out a fifth nuclear test.

The Vienna-based Internatio­nal Peace Foundation, which is organising the trip, said yesterday it was an exercise in “silent diplomacy” that would focus on topics such as economic policy and medical developmen­t.

The three laureates from Norway, Britain and Israel, who won their Nobel Prizes for economics, medicine and chemistry, will give speeches and hold seminars with students at some of the North’s elite schools, including Kim Il-Sung University.

“The events will not engage in rhetoric by making political statements,” the foundation said in a press release.

Its founding chairman, Uwe Morawetz, who has visited the North six times over the past two years to prepare the visit, said: “Listening to and engaging with the young generation of [North Korea] may be a gateway to establish a dialogue which could contribute to a wider understand­ing beyond politics and power play.”

The trip is likely to be criticised by some, at a time when the focus of the internatio­nal community is on tightening North Korea’s diplomatic and economic isolation.

The April 29 to May 6 dates mean the visit might also coincide with a fresh North Korean nuclear test.

South Korean President Park Geun-Hye confirmed yesterday that increased activity had been detected at the North’s nuclear test site at Punggye-ri, suggesting an undergroun­d detonation could be imminent.

Numerous analysts have predicted Pyongyang may carry out a fifth test just before a rare ruling party congress next month, at which leader Kim Jong-Un is expected to take credit for pushing the country’s nuclear weapons programme to new heights.

No formal date has been set for the congress, but South Korea’s intelligen­ce agency says it will likely be held on May 7.

North Korea conducted its fourth nuclear test in January, triggering the most extensive UN sanctions to date, aimed at cutting funding sources for its nuclear developmen­t.

The three laureates are expected to hold a press conference in Beijing after their visit. — AFP

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