Business Standard

N Korea reopens border hotline with S Korea

- CHRISTINE KIM

North Korea reopened a long-closed border hotline with South Korea on Wednesday, hours after US President Donald Trump appeared to mock the North’s leader by saying he has a “bigger and more powerful” nuclear button than he does.

The North’s decision to open the border phone line came a day after South Korea proposed high-level discussion­s amid a tense standoff over North Korea's missile and nuclear programmes.

That followed North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s New Year address in which he said he was open to speaking with the South and would consider sending a delegation to the Winter Olympics to be held just across the border in Pyeongchan­g in February.

US officials said Washington would not take any talks between North and South Korea seriously if they did not contribute to denucleari­sing North Korea. A State Department spokeswoma­n said North Korea “be trying to drive a wedge of some sort”.

Kim ordered the reopening of the hotline at the truce village of Panmunjom at 0630 GMT on Wednesday, when South Korean officials at the border received a call from the North, the South's unificatio­n ministry said in a text message.

Officials on both sides were checking the line and conducting a conversati­on, the contents of which were not disclosed by the ministry.

That gesture came only hours after Trump, who has mocked Kim as “Little Rocket Man”, again ridiculed the North Korean leader on Twitter.

“Will someone from his depleted and food starved regime please inform him that I too have a Nuclear Button, but it is a much bigger & more powerful one than his, and my Button works!” Trump tweeted. Trump and Kim have exchanged a series of bellicose comments in recent months, raising alarm across the world, with Trump at times dismissing the prospect of a diplomatic solution to a crisis in which North Korea has threatened to destroy the US.

While appearing to open the door to discussing taking part in the Winter Olympics, Kim also warned that he would push ahead with “mass producing” nuclear warheads in defiance of UN sanctions.

His New Year's Day speech came after a steep increase in missile launches in 2017, as well as the North's sixth and most powerful nuclear test. Kim, who has vowed to develop a nuclear-tipped missile capable of reaching the United States, said he had a nuclear button on his desk. The hotline with the South was shut down by North Korea in February 2016 in retaliatio­n against the closing of a border factory town that was jointly operated by the two Koreas.

"We will try to keep close communicat­ions with the south Korean side from sincere stand(sic) and honest attitude, true to the intention of our supreme leadership, and deal with the practical matters related to the dispatch of our delegation," the North's KCNA news agency quoted Ri Son Gwon, chairman of North Korea's Committee for the Peaceful Reunificat­ion of the Fatherland, as saying.

The North’s decision to open the border phone line came a day after South Korea proposed high-level discussion­s amid a tense standoff over North Korea's missile and nuclear programmes

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