Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Xi meets with Kim in Pyongyang

- By Ken Moritsugu

The North Korean leader told visiting Chinese president that he is waiting for a response in U.S. nuclear talks.

BEIJING — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, meeting in Pyongyang with Chinese President Xi Jinping, said Thursday that his country is waiting for a desired response in stalled nuclear talks with the United States.

“North Korea would like to remain patient, but it hopes the relevant party will meet halfway with North Korea to explore resolution plans that accommodat­e each other’s reasonable concerns,” he said, according to Chinese state broadcaste­r CCTV.

Xi’s trip to North Korea, the first by a Chinese president in 14 years, raises the possibilit­y that China could help break a monthslong impasse in talks between the U.S. and North Korea over the North’s nuclear weapons.

Describing the issue as “highly complex and sensitive,” Xi said his government is willing to play a constructi­ve role in the denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula.

“The internatio­nal community expects the U.S. and North Korea to continue to talk and achieve results,” he said, according to CCTV.

The summit comes as both countries are locked in separate disputes with the United States — China over trade and North Korea over its nuclear weapons.

With Xi due to meet President Donald Trump next week in Japan, analysts say Kim may ask the Chinese leader to pass on a message that could revive the talks with the U.S.

Xi’s two-day state visit to North Korea, announced just three days ago, began with the synchroniz­ed pomp of all major events in the country.

About 10,000 cheering people and a 21-gun salute greeted Xi and senior Chinese officials at an arrival ceremony at Pyongyang’s airport.

The CCTV evening news showed Xi and his wife Peng Liyuan waving to the crowd after emerging from their Air China plane, then being greeted by Kim and his wife, Ri Sol Ju before receiving flowers and watching goose-stepping troops march by.

The crowd stood in tight formations, waving flowers and chanting slogans to welcome Xi. Other people lined the roads and cheered from overpasses as Xi’s motorcade traveled to central Pyongyang, where he joined Kim in an open-top vehicle.

Standing in the car, they waved to crowds as they rode to the square where the embalmed bodies of Kim’s grandfathe­r and father lie in state.

The Korean Central News Agency, which is an arm of the North Korean government, said newspapers in the country are praising Xi’s visit.

“Newspapers of the DPRK in their editorials on Thursday say that the Korean people warmly welcome with delight Xi Jinping, president of the People’s Republic of China, who is coming to the DPRK with the warm friendship feeling of the fraternal Chinese people,” the KCNA reported.

Nuclear talks between the U.S. and North Korea broke down after a second summit between Kim and Trump in February in Vietnam ended in failure.

A series of North Korean ballistic missile and nuclear tests in 2016 and 2017 alarmed the U.S., its Asian allies, Japan and South Korea, and even China. Last year, Kim turned to diplomacy, including his first meeting with Trump in Singapore.

The talks with the U.S. have reached an impasse over a fundamenta­l difference in approach.

The U.S. is demanding that North Korea abandon its nuclear weapons entirely before internatio­nal sanctions are lifted. North Korea is seeking a step-bystep approach in which moves toward denucleari­zation are matched by concession­s from the U.S., notably a relaxation of the sanctions.

“Over more than a year, the North Korean side has taken many positive measures to avoid escalation of the situation and manage and control the peninsular situation, but it hasn’t received an active response from the relevant party,” Kim told Xi on Thursday, according to CCTV.

Xi is expected to endorse North Korea’s calls for an incrementa­l disarmamen­t process.

 ?? JUNG YEON-JE/GETTY-AFP ?? People in Seoul watch a TV showing North Korean leader Kim Jong Un greeting Chinese President Xi Jinping.
JUNG YEON-JE/GETTY-AFP People in Seoul watch a TV showing North Korean leader Kim Jong Un greeting Chinese President Xi Jinping.

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