Bangkok Post

Rival Korean officials get ready for talks

Goal of meeting is to plan third summit

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SEOUL: The rival Koreas will meet on Monday for high-level talks meant to prepare for a summit between North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and South Korean President Moon Jae-in, South Korea said yesterday, the third such meeting between the leaders in recent months.

The announceme­nt by an official at the South’s Unificatio­n Ministry, which handles inter-Korean issues for Seoul, comes amid attempts by Washington and Pyongyang to follow through on nuclear disarmamen­t vows made at a summit in June between US President Donald Trump and Mr Kim.

Pyongyang has also stepped up its calls for a formal end to the Korean War, which some analysts believe is meant to be the first step in the North’s effort to eventually see all 28,500 US troops leave the Korean Peninsula. Washington is pushing for the North to begin giving up its nuclear programme.

The South Korean official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of office rules, said the two Koreas will also discuss ways to push through tensionred­ucing agreements made during an earlier summit between Mr Kim and Mr Moon.

It wasn’t clear who would attend next week’s talks, but such meetings have typically been handled in the past by South Korea’s unificatio­n minister and his counterpar­t in the North. It also wasn’t clear when another leaders’ summit might happen.

Earlier yesterday, North Korea’s Rodong Sinmun said in a commentary that ending the Korean War is “the first process for ensuring peace and security not only in the Korean peninsula but also in the region and the world’’.

The Korean Peninsula is still technicall­y in a state of war because the 195053 fighting ended with a ceasefire, not a peace treaty.

Seoul said it accepted the North’s proposal after Pyongyang first suggested a meeting Monday to discuss another summit between the leaders.

Mr Kim and Mr Moon met in April, at a highly publicised summit that saw the leaders hold hands and walk together across the border, and then again in a more informal summit in May.

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