The Citizen (Gauteng)

Koreans feel cheated

FUMING: CANCELLATI­ON OF US-NORTH KOREA SUMMIT A BLOW TO PEACE

- Seoul

‘You Yankee’, ‘it’s not right to isolate the country again’ after it dismantled its nuclear test site.

Many South Koreans were fuming yesterday after US President Donald Trump cancelled a historic summit with North Korea’s Kim Jong-un, feeling they had been cheated of a chance of a lifetime to live in peace.

Trump called off the unpreceden­ted meeting, scheduled for June 12 in Singapore, after months of diplomatic progress had silenced hostile rhetoric from the two sides and eased fears of a return to war.

“North Korea was in the process of doing everything that had been demanded of it. They even detonated their nuclear test site,” said Eugene Lim, a 29-year-old office worker in Seoul.

“Trump has no interest in peace in our country. Why can’t he just let us, the two Koreas, live in peace?”

North Korea on Thursday “completely dismantled” its Punggye-ri nuclear test ground to “ensure the transparen­cy of discontinu­ance of nuclear tests”, after blowing up tunnels at the site, it said.

The detonation, which took place in the presence of dozens of internatio­nal journalist­s but no independen­t experts, came after Kim pledged to cease all nuclear and long-range missile tests. Kim also released three US prisoners as a gesture of goodwill.

Dozens of university students and women’s rights activists protested in different rallies in Seoul yesterday to denounce Trump, with some punching his face printed on a picket sign and tearing his photograph apart.

Kim Dong-ho, a 38-year-old employee at a blockchain company, said it wasn’t right to isolate North Korea again when it was making efforts to join the internatio­nal community.

“After all, those of us living on the Korean peninsula suffer the consequenc­es of your action, you Yankee,” Kim said.

Trump also warned North Korea the US military was ready in the event of any reckless acts and when asked if the summit cancellati­on increased the risk of war, he replied: “We’ll see what happens.”

South Korean President Moon Jae-in, who worked hard to help set up the summit and urged Trump at a White House meeting on Tuesday not to let a rare opportunit­y slip away, said he was “perplexed” by the cancellati­on.

North Korea said it remained open to resolving issues with the US, “regardless of ways, at any time”.

South Koreans’ perception of North Korea, especially those in their 20s and 30s, has visibly softened after Kim and Moon pledged no more war in their inter-Korean summit in April, according to several polls.

A Gallup Korea survey this

month suggested 88% of South Koreans thought the inter-Korean summit held was a success, while only 5% said it was a failure. The remainder declined to comment.

A survey of 106 university students at Kookmin University in Seoul showed 57.3% had a positive image of Kim after the summit, compared to 19.8% beforehand.

North and South Korea are technicall­y still at war because their 1950-53 conflict ended in a truce, not a peace treaty. The US stations 28 500 troops in the South.

 ?? Picture: EPA-EFE ?? PROTEST. A South Korean protester mocks US President Donald Trump at a rally near the US embassy in Seoul, following the cancellati­on of the summit between the US and North Korea.
Picture: EPA-EFE PROTEST. A South Korean protester mocks US President Donald Trump at a rally near the US embassy in Seoul, following the cancellati­on of the summit between the US and North Korea.

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