Kuwait Times

North Korea wants Pope to visit, South Korea to tell Vatican

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SEOUL: North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has invited Pope Francis to visit, saying he would be “ardently welcomed”, South Korea’s presidency said yesterday, adding it would pass on Pyongyang’s message to the Vatican. South Korean President Moon Jae-in will have an audience with the Pope during a visit to the Vatican from October 17 to 18.

“During the meeting with Pope Francis, he (Moon) will relay the message from chairman Kim Jong Un that he would ardently welcome the pope if he visits Pyongyang,” Moon’s spokesman, Kim Eui-kyeom, told reporters. Moon is embarking on a nine day tour of Europe from October 13 to 21 that will include stops in France, Italy and Denmark on top of the Vatican. The doveish Moon has pushed rapprochem­ent with Kim, meeting him three times in the last year. During the most recent face to face - a visit to Pyongyang last month - Moon was accompanie­d by South Korean Archbishop Hyginus Kim Hee-joong.

During a conversati­on with the visiting archbishop, Kim urged him to let the Vatican know his intention to build peace, according to Moon’s spokesman. The young leader of the isolated, impoverish­ed but nuclear-armed North has taken a series of reconcilia­tory gestures since early this year, including a land summit with US President Donald Trump in June. During last month’s summit, Kim also reaffirmed efforts to ease military tension on the flashpoint peninsula but remained vague on measures on how to dismantle his widelyfear­ed atomic arsenal.

Religious freedom is enshrined in the North’s constituti­on, but all religious activity is subject to extremely tight restrictio­ns and completely banned outside of state-sanctioned institutio­ns. In the early 20th century before the division of the peninsula, Pyongyang was a regional missionary hub with scores of churches and a thriving Christian community that earned it the title of “Jerusalem of the East”. But Kim Il Sung, the North’s late founding leader and the current ruler’s grandfathe­r, viewed Christiani­ty as a threat to his authoritar­ian rule and eradicated it through executions and labour camps. — AFP

 ??  ?? VATICAN CITY: Pope Francis leaves after he delivered his blessing to the faithful during The Angelus Prayer, at Saint Peter Square. —AFP
VATICAN CITY: Pope Francis leaves after he delivered his blessing to the faithful during The Angelus Prayer, at Saint Peter Square. —AFP

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