Bangkok Post

Pyongyang attacks Moon, demands workers’ return

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SEOUL: North Korea lambasted South Korea’s President Moon Jae-in yesterday for “needlessly kibitzing” about relations between Pyongyang and Washington and dismissed Mr Moon’s pledge to take the driver’s seat on the Korean Peninsula as “sophistry”.

North Korean state media, which has often derided the South and its former presidents as a “puppet” of US hostile forces, has notably refrained from criticisin­g the Moon administra­tion especially after this year’s thaw in relations.

The Rodong Sinmun, North Korea’s official party newspaper, slammed Seoul’s recent praise of its own efforts to bring about the first inter-Korean summit in more than a decade in April, and an unpreceden­ted summit between North Korea and the United States, under the liberal president’s peace initiative.

“It’s a self-exalting, farfetched allusion and vain kibitzing without realising their own circumstan­ces,” the Rodong Sinmun said in a commentary.

The newspaper did not mention Mr Moon by name but pointed to his remarks during a visit to Singapore last week that North Korea and the United States would face the “stern judgement” of the internatio­nal community if their leaders fail to keep the promise they publicly made.

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and US President Donald Trump agreed to work toward denucleari­sation at their summit in Singapore on June 12, but there has been no sign of concrete action. Seoul’s Unificatio­n Ministry said it has no comment on the North’s denounceme­nt.

Mr Moon’s initiative to play a central role is “nonsensica­l sophistry,” said the newspaper, accusing Seoul of caring only about the view of its “master” Washington and failing to take any practical steps to fundamenta­lly improve inter-Korean relations.

“It’s a known fact inside and outside that the South does not have the capability to resolve the peninsula affairs and elicit an agreement,” the report said.

“When we and the United States are making efforts to implement the Singapore agreement, who would listen to such rude, atrocious sophistry with a presumptuo­us forecast lacking reality?”

In another attack against the Moon administra­tion, Uriminzokk­iri, a North Korean propaganda website, urged it to repatriate a dozen North Korean restaurant workers who came to the South in 2016.

The 12 had worked at a North Korean restaurant in China. Pyongyang claims they were abducted by South Korean authoritie­s. The South has said the workers defected of their own free will.

Uriminzokk­iri said there could be an “obstacle” in the planned reunion of families divided by the 1950-53 Korean War next month if the workers are not returned.

It lashed out at Unificatio­n Minister Cho Myoung-gyon by name, accusing him of “siding with” the former government which it said plotted the workers’ defection.

A ministry spokeswoma­n refused to comment, but stressed that the family reunions were agreed by Mr Moon and Mr Kim during their first summit in April.

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