Las Vegas Review-Journal

China praises Kim on overtures

Better relations linked to recent Beijing meeting

- The Associated Press

BEIJING — China’s foreign minister congratula­ted North Korean leader Kim Jong Un on Thursday on his moves to reduce tensions with South Korea, China said. Their meeting in Pyongyang underscore­d warming ties and Beijing’s desire to remain a key player in the Korean Peninsula peace process.

Foreign Minister Wang Yi also told Kim that Beijing backs North Korea’s shift of focus to economic growth, along with its efforts to resolve its “legitimate security concerns” while taking steps to denucleari­ze, China’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

China “supports and congratula­tes” Kim’s summit meeting last week with South Korean President Moon Jae-in and the statement they issued, it quoted Wang as saying.

“The meeting has brought a favorable opportunit­y for a political resolution of the (Korean) Peninsula issue,” Wang said.

Relations between China and North Korea have undergone a vast outward improvemen­t following Kim’s recent visit to Beijing. China, North Korea’s biggest trading partner, has joined United Nations sanctions against the North that have cut trade between them by around 90 percent.

Kim’s March trip was his first to his country’s only major ally since taking power six years ago, kicking off a flurry of diplomacy. A meeting between Kim and President Donald Trump is expected in the coming weeks.

For China, the recent meetings offer an opportunit­y for it to reinforce its importance in the region and ensure that its concerns and interests are respected in any future negotiatio­ns.

Wang’s visit, which was to end Thursday, was aimed at exploring ways China can contribute to the easing of tensions, along with implementi­ng agreements reached in Beijing by Kim and Chinese President Xi Jinping, said Da Zhigang, a researcher at the Heilongjia­ng Academy of Social Sciences in northeaste­rn China.

Denucleari­zation efforts should “do no harm by taking into considerat­ion the interests of all parties, including China,” Da said.

“If the promotion of denucleari­zation turns the regional situation chaotic, then that is not what people want to see,” he said.

China sent troops to fight on North Korea’s side in the 1950-53 Korean War, but relations have suffered in recent years over the North’s reluctance to implement Chinese-style economic reforms and Kim’s continued pursuit of nuclear bombs and the missiles to deliver them.

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