Kuwait Times

N Korean leader sends special envoy to China

Pyongyang giving diplomacy a chance

-

After months of ignoring China’s warnings to give up its nuclear program, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un sent a high-level confidant to Beijing yesterday, in a possible effort to mend strained ties with its most important ally and the latest sign that Pyongyang may be giving diplomacy a chance. The trip by Vice Marshal Choe Ryong Hae, a senior Workers’ Party official and the military’s top political officer, is taking place as tensions ease somewhat on the Korean Peninsula after neardaily vows from Pyongyang to attack Washington and Seoul in March and April. The United States, Japan, South Korea, China and Russia have been busy discussing how best to engage with the North Koreans. Japan sent an envoy to North Korea last week to discuss decades-old abductions of its citizens, a move that has drawn concern among allies of Tokyo who want denucleari­zation to be the focus of talks.

Choe’s visit is the first this year by a top North Korean official to China, which is under pressure from the US and others to rein in its belligeren­t neighbor. It’s also the first since a change of leadership in Beijing, whose new leaders have demonstrat­ed a willingnes­s to work with Washington to harry Pyongyang over its nuclear weapons programs even as stability in North Korea remains the Chinese government’s priority.

North Korea also revealed yesterday that a former defense minister, Kim Kyok Sik, was promoted to chief of the Korean People’s Army in the latest in a series of high-level military reshuffles as Kim Jong Un elevates a new generation of military leaders.

Foreign analysts see Choe’s trip as part fence-mending mission, part appeal for aid. The last high-level North Korea-China meeting took place when Chinese Communist Party chief Xi Jinping sent a Politburo member to Pyongyang in November. Weeks later, North Korea launched a long-range rocket, followed by an undergroun­d nuclear test in February. That test, the country’s third, drew tightened sanctions by the UN and United States.

Showing its displeasur­e with North Korea, China has tightened inspection­s on cross-border trade and its state banks have halted business with North Korea’s Foreign Trade Bank - signs that Beijing is getting serious about enforcing sanctions.

“The North Korean side has been feeling China’s pressure,” said Ma Xiaojun, a North Korea watcher at the Central Party School, a think tank for the leadership in Beijing.

“Our policies and stance have tended to be tougher and more clearly express our unhappines­s and displeasur­e,” said Ma. He added, quoting President Xi, “causing trouble on China’s doorstep is not right, and China will not tolerate it.”

Choe’s priority is to mend ties, Ma said. Immediatel­y upon landing in Beijing, Choe went to see Wang Jiarui, head of the Chinese leadership’s internatio­nal affairs office and long the point man for China’s dealings with Pyongyang.

China is impoverish­ed North Korea’s economic and diplomatic lifeline, providing nearly all of its fuel and most of its trade. China accounted for 89 percent of North Korea’s exports and imports in 2011, according to the most recent figures available from Korea Trade-Investment Promotion Agency in Seoul, South Korea, which collects North Korean trade data.

China and North Korea are jointly developing two special economic zones: Rason on the Korean Peninsula’s northeaste­rn tip and Hwanggumph­yong, an island in the Yalu River on North Korea’s western border. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei reiterated yesterday that Beijing is committed to seeing North Korea denucleari­ze while maintainin­g regional stability - a catchphras­e for continued Chinese support for Pyongyang.

Last week, a Japanese envoy traveled to Pyongyang for ongoing discussion­s about the decades-old abductions of its citizens by North Korea. After the envoy’s return, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said he would be open to holding a summit with Kim Jong Un if it would lead to a breakthrou­gh. The issue is of great importance to Japanese, though when it returned five abduction victims in 2002, North Korea said there were no more living abductees.

Other countries are worried about focusing on Japanese abductions. Glyn Davies, the US special representa­tive for North Korea policy, warned North Korea might be trying to use talks with Japan to drive a wedge between the policies of Tokyo, Washington and Seoul.

During a summit with US President Barack Obama this month, South Korean President Park Geunhye laid out her policy of building trust with North Korea while remaining firm against provocatio­ns. Her office said she may travel to China next month.

China wants security assurances that North Korea will act with less belligeren­ce and make efforts to ease tension, said Daniel Pinkston, an expert on North Korea with the Internatio­nal Crisis Group think tank who is based in Seoul, South Korea.

Because Choe has high-level military and ruling party positions, he can cover a variety of topics and likely will discuss security, normalizat­ion of economic ties and possible requests for aid when he meets with Chinese officials, Pinkston said.

Choe is a longtime Kim family friend who often is pictured standing next to the leader, along with Jang Song Thaek, Kim Jong Un’s uncle. Jang, a top official now in charge of overseeing the push to expand North Korea’s sports industry, visited China in August last year but was not in yesterday’s delegation.

Choe may also try to explain North Korea’s recent military moves, including short-range projectile launches off the east coast, said Lee Ji-sue, a North Korea specialist and professor at Myongji University in Seoul. He may also be paving the way for a visit by Kim Jong Un, who has not been to Beijing since taking power following the December 2011 death of his father, Kim Jong Il. The elder Kim visited China in August 2011. Meanwhile, among the North Korean officials who went to the tarmac yesterday to see Choe off was Gen. Kim Kyok Sik, North Korea’s newly named chief of the armed forces.—AP

 ??  ?? BEIJING: In this photo provided by China’s official Xinhua News Agency, Wang Jiarui, right, the head of the Chinese leadership’s internatio­nal affairs office, meets with North Korea’s Vice Marshal Choe Ryong Hae, a senior Workers’ Party official and...
BEIJING: In this photo provided by China’s official Xinhua News Agency, Wang Jiarui, right, the head of the Chinese leadership’s internatio­nal affairs office, meets with North Korea’s Vice Marshal Choe Ryong Hae, a senior Workers’ Party official and...
 ??  ?? FRANKLIN: This June 2009 photo provided by Christophe­r Savoie shows him, center, with his son, Isaac, and daughter, Rebecca, at a park near their home in Franklin, Tenn. The children were later taken to Japan by their mother, in violation of a US court...
FRANKLIN: This June 2009 photo provided by Christophe­r Savoie shows him, center, with his son, Isaac, and daughter, Rebecca, at a park near their home in Franklin, Tenn. The children were later taken to Japan by their mother, in violation of a US court...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait