Bangkok Post

North Korea establishe­s team for talks with Japan

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>> TOKYO: North Korea has establishe­d a team to negotiate with Japan, which itself is seeking talks to settle many matters, sources familiar on the matter said on Friday.

The negotiatin­g team was apparently establishe­d sometime between April and the historic US-North Korea summit on June 12, reflecting a move by Pyongyang to explore dialogue with Tokyo in the midst of a rapid change in the geopolitic­s of the Korean Peninsula.

North Korea judged earlier this year that mending ties with Japan would become a future task if it moves to improve ties with the United States, South Korea, and China, the sources said.

At a plenary meeting in April of the central committee of North Korea’s ruling party, the policy of pursuing active dialogue with surroundin­g countries was adopted, they added.

Tokyo has long sought answers about the abduction of Japanese by North Korea in the 1970s and 1980s. Japan officially lists 17 citizens as abduction victims and suspects the North’s involvemen­t in many more disappeara­nces.

But no progress has been made despite exchanges via the team, according to the sources, and prospects for making progress are clouded by the murky outlook for the ongoing denucleari­sation talks between the United States and North Korea.

It is not known who heads the negotiatin­g team, but Kim Yong-chol, a close aide to the North Korean leader and vice chairman of the Central Committee of the Workers’ Party of Korea, is among the names being floated.

Japan is exploring the possibilit­y of a summit between Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un on the occasion of internatio­nal gatherings in September either in the Russian far eastern city of Vladivosto­k or New York.

After US President Donald Trump met with Mr Kim in Singapore in June, Mr Abe, placing priority on resolving the abduction issue, expressed a willingnes­s to hold direct talks with North Korea.

North Korea’s negotiatin­g team is believed to be playing a role in handling Pyongyang’s response to Japan.

So far, the North Korean side has conveyed to Japan that it has not abandoned a 2014 bilateral agreement to reinvestig­ate the whereabout­s of abducted Japanese nationals. But the easing of Japan’s unilateral sanctions on North Korea is necessary for Pyongyang to agree to resume doing so.

In 2014, the two countries agreed that Pyongyang would reinvestig­ate the fates of all the abduction victims, however, North Korea disbanded the panel and in doing so effectivel­y abandoned the bilateral agreement in 2016.

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