The Palm Beach Post

Rival Korean leaders to meet in Pyongyang in September

- By Youkyung Lee

SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA — The rival Koreas announced Monday that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and South Korean President Moon Jae-in will meet in Pyongyang sometime in September, while their envoys also discussed Pyongyang’s nuclear disarmamen­t efforts and internatio­nal sanctions.

The push for what would be the leaders’ third summit since April comes amid renewed worries surroundin­g a nuclear standoff between Washington and Pyongyang.

The announceme­nt released after nearly two hours of talks led by the rivals’ chiefs for inter-Korean affairs was remarkably thin on details. In a three-sentence joint statement, the two sides did not mention an exact date for the summit and provided no details on how to implement past agreements.

Ri Son Gwon, the head of the North Korean delegation, told pool reporters at the end of the talks that officials agreed on a specific date for the summit in Pyongyang sometime within September, but he refused to share the date, saying he wanted to “keep reporters wondering.”

The South Korean unificatio­n minister, Cho Myounggyon, told reporters after the meeting that officials still had some work to do before agreeing on when exactly the summit would happen. He said the two sides will again discuss when the leaders would meet but didn’t say when.

It wasn’t clear why Ri and Cho differed on the issue of the date, and Cho wouldn’t answer a specific question about the discrepanc­y.

The meeting at a North Korea-controlled building in the border village of Panmunjom comes as the internatio­nal community waits to see if North Korea will begin abandoning its nuclear weapons program, something officials suggested would happen after Kim’s summit with President Donald Trump in June in Singapore.

North Korea is thought to have a growing arsenal of nuclear bombs and longrange missiles and to be closing in on the ability to reliably target anywhere on the U.S. mainland. A string of North Korean weapons tests last year, during which Pyongyang claimed to have completed its nuclear arsenal, had many in Asia worried that Washington and Pyongyang were on the brink of war.

Cho, the chief of the South Korean delegation, said the two sides also “talked a lot” about internatio­nal sanctions meant to punish the North for its developmen­t of nuclear weapons, but he didn’t elaborate.

The South Korean envoy said he urged Pyongyang to accelerate its current nuclear negotiatio­ns with the United States.

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 ?? SOUTH KOREAN UNIFICATIO­N MINISTRY ?? South Korean Unificatio­n Minister Cho Myoung-gyon (second on right) shakes hands with his North Korean counterpar­t, Ri Son Gwon, after their meeting on Monday in Panmunjom, North Korea.
SOUTH KOREAN UNIFICATIO­N MINISTRY South Korean Unificatio­n Minister Cho Myoung-gyon (second on right) shakes hands with his North Korean counterpar­t, Ri Son Gwon, after their meeting on Monday in Panmunjom, North Korea.

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