The Timaru Herald

Xi urges better relations for Koreas

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South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol asked China to play a more active, constructi­ve role in curbing the nuclear threat from North Korea when he met Chinese President Xi Jinping yesterday at the Group of 20 summit in Indonesia, officials said.

Xi told Yoon that he hopes South Korea will try to improve its ties with rival North Korea, Yoon’s office said, in a reflection of the two countries’ divergent views on North Korea.

The Yoon-Xi meeting on the sidelines of the G-20, the first summit between the leaders of the two countries since December 2019, came after North Korea testlaunch­ed dozens of missiles, many of them nuclear-capable, in recent weeks.

Some experts say North Korea has been able to continue its barrage of missile tests in part because China and Russia have opposed efforts by the United States and its allies to adopt new UN sanctions against the North. Washington is locked in a strategic competitio­n with Beijing and in a confrontat­ion with Moscow over its invasion of Ukraine.

China, North Korea’s biggest source of aid and its economic lifeline, is believed to have the greatest leverage over North Korea. But it is suspected of not fully enforcing UN sanctions on North Korea and of shipping clandestin­e assistance to help keep afloat its impoverish­ed socialist ally, which it views as a bulwark against US influence on the Korean Peninsula.

During his meeting with Xi, ‘‘President Yoon said he hopes that China would play a more active, constructi­ve role (on the North Korean issue) as its neighbour and a member of the UN Security Council, after noting that North Korea has recently escalated nuclear and missile threats by launching provocatio­ns with an unpreceden­ted frequency,’’ Yoon’s office said in a statement.

Xi said China and South Korea have common interests on the Korean Peninsula and both nations must safeguard peace. He also said he hopes that South

Korea will actively seek better relations with North Korea, Yoon’s office said.

A Chinese government statement on the meeting didn’t say whether the two leaders discussed North Korea.

According to the Chinese statement, Xi said China was ready to work with South Korea to boost bilateral ties and provide greater stability for the region and the world. It quoted Xi as stressing the need for the two countries to increase strategic communicat­ions and political trust.

Yoon’s office also said the South Korean leader proposed that the two countries hold regular high-level talks to jointly respond to the pandemic, the global economic slump and climate issues. It said Xi agreed on the need for high-level dialogue.

Since taking office in May, Yoon, a conservati­ve, has been seeking to solidify his country’s military alliance with the United States and participat­e in US-led regional initiative­s. Yoon’s government has repeatedly said such moves won’t target China, its biggest trading partner.

Some analysts say Yoon’s tilt towards Washington could trigger economic retaliatio­n by China, as it did in 2017 when South Korea allowed the United States to install a missile defence system in its territory that Beijing views as a security threat. But others say China will likely be cautious about further economic retaliatio­n because it would push South Korea closer to the US and worsen anti-Chinese sentiment in South Korea.

South Korea, the world’s 10th largest economy, is a major supplier of semiconduc­tors, automobile­s, smartphone­s and other electronic products, making it an attractive partner to both the United States and China. – AP

 ?? ?? South Korea’s President Yoon Suk Yeol talks with his staff during an Asean summit in Phnom Penh earlier this week. The United States and its two top Asian allies, Japan and South Korea, have been working quietly on the sidelines of this week’s Group of 20 meetings in Bali, Indonesia, to raise the issue of North Korea’s growing aggressive­ness and build a broader coalition of like-minded states to help maintain internatio­nal pressure on it.
South Korea’s President Yoon Suk Yeol talks with his staff during an Asean summit in Phnom Penh earlier this week. The United States and its two top Asian allies, Japan and South Korea, have been working quietly on the sidelines of this week’s Group of 20 meetings in Bali, Indonesia, to raise the issue of North Korea’s growing aggressive­ness and build a broader coalition of like-minded states to help maintain internatio­nal pressure on it.

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