Yorkshire Post

N Korea urged not to pull out of Trump meeting

- CHARLES BROWN NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT

CHINA HAS urged its ally North Korea to proceed with a historic summit between its leader, Kim Jong Un, and US president Donald Trump amid threats from Pyongyang to scrap the meeting.

Foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang said the sides should ensure the meeting runs as planned and yields “substantia­l outcomes”.

Mr Kim and Mr Trump are due to meet in Singapore on June 12, but Pyongyang has threatened to withdraw, saying it has no interest in a “one-sided” affair meant to pressure it into abandoning its nuclear weapons.

Mr Lu said the meeting was crucial to reducing tensions on the Korean Peninsula and maintainin­g regional peace and stability.

The Chinese call came as President Xi Jinping met with a delegation from North Korea’s ruling Workers’ Party, at which he expressed support for the North’s avowed new emphasis on economic developmen­t along with improving relations with South Korea.

Mr Xi said: “We support the improvemen­t of North-South (Korean) relations, the promotion of dialogue between North Korea and the US, denucleari­sation on the peninsula and North Korea’s developmen­t of its economy and improvemen­t of its people’s livelihood.”

The North’s warning came hours after it abruptly cancelled a high-level meeting with South Korea, in protest over US-South Korean military exercises.

A senior Japanese official said Tokyo considers the US-South Korean joint exercise, along with those between the three allies, as key pillars of deterrence in the region. Deputy chief cabinet secretary Yasutoshi Nishimura said Japan is moving ahead with the preparatio­n for planned talks between the North’s leader Kim Jong Un and President Trump in the hopes they would provide a momentum toward comprehens­ively resolving North Korea’s problems.

Mr Nishimura said Japan will continue to cooperate with the US and South Korea and they agree on the need to maintain sanctions until the North changes its current policy.

He said: “We believe that steady implementa­tion of the USSouth Korea joint military exercise is important to maintain the regional peace and safety.”

South Korea’s defence ministry said the exercises will go on.

Spokeswoma­n Choi Hyunsoo said the Max Thunder drills are chiefly about improving the skills of pilots, and are not attack exercises. The drills, which began on Monday and reportedly include some 100 aircraft, will continue until May 25.

 ??  ?? Golfers play on as an ash plume rises from the Kilauea volcano on Hawaii’s Big Island. The US Geological Survey said a recent lowering of the lava lake at the volcano’s Halemaumau crater ‘has raised the potential for explosive eruptions’ at the volcano.
Golfers play on as an ash plume rises from the Kilauea volcano on Hawaii’s Big Island. The US Geological Survey said a recent lowering of the lava lake at the volcano’s Halemaumau crater ‘has raised the potential for explosive eruptions’ at the volcano.

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