The Borneo Post

Summit bears fruit as South Korea flies tangerines to North

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SEOUL: South Korean military transport aircraft began a tangerine airlift to North Korea yesterday, the first of a gift of 200 tonnes of the fruit from the southern island of Jeju, South Korea’s presidenti­al Blue House said.

The present comes after the North Koreans gave South Korean President Moon Jae-in two tonnes of pricey pine mushrooms after a summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Pyongyang in September.

North Korea has pursued nuclear and missile programmes in defiance of UN sanctions and South Korean officials said last week they had tested the mushrooms for radiation after an opposition lawmaker complained.

The Jeju tangerines were packed in 20,000 boxes and will be flown to Pyongyang by four C-130 aircraft during multiple flights on Sunday and today, the Blue House said in a statement.

Several senior South Korean officials, including Vice Unificatio­n Minister Chun Haesung and presidenti­al secretary for unificatio­n policy Suh Ho, flew to Pyongyang to deliver the first shipment.

North Korean leader Kim faces continued internatio­nal pressure over his weapons programmes.

He vowed to work toward denucleari­sation during his historic June summit with US President Donald Trump, but Pyongyang’s actions have fallen short of US demands for irreversib­le steps to scrap its arsenal, including a full disclosure of nuclear facilities and materials.

That has left inter- Korean efforts limited by internatio­nal and unilateral sanctions that bar many forms of economic interactio­n with North Korea.

But South and North Korea have conducted a number of inter- Korean projects designed to lower tensions, including joint sports and cultural events, closing some guardposts along their shared border, and regular high-level negotiatio­ns. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Surgeons in the operating theatre working together after separating Dawa and Nima at Melbourne’s Royal Children’s Hospital. — AFP photo
Surgeons in the operating theatre working together after separating Dawa and Nima at Melbourne’s Royal Children’s Hospital. — AFP photo

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