The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Koreas agree to work for a ‘nuclear-free peninsula’

SUMMIT: Pledge comes after leaders from North and South meet for historic talks on border – while Trump hails ‘end of war’

- FOSTER KLUG

The two Koreas have agreed to rid their peninsula of nuclear weapons after historic talks between the two leaders.

A joint statement issued by Kim Jong-un and Moon Jae-in after the summit said the two had confirmed their goal of achieving “a nuclear-free Korean peninsula through complete denucleari­sation”.

The pair did not provide any specific new measures or forge a potential breakthrou­gh on the pledge, but the summit will be remembered for the sight of two men from nations with a deep and bitter rivalry holding each other’s hands and grinning from ear to ear.

Standing at a podium next to Mr Moon after the talks ended, Mr Kim faced a wall of cameras beaming his image live to the world and declared that the Koreas are “linked by blood as a family and compatriot­s who cannot live separately”.

Mr Kim’s single step across the cracked, weathered concrete marking the Koreas’ border made him the first ruler of North Korea to step on South Korean soil since the war.

The latest declaratio­n between the Koreas, Mr Kim said, should not repeat the “unfortunat­e history of past inter-Korean agreements that only reached the starting line” before becoming derailed.

US President Donald Trump marked the occasion by tweeting: “KOREAN WAR TO END!”

Both Koreas agreed to jointly push for talks this year with Washington, and also potentiall­y China, to officially end the Korean War, which finished with an armistice that never ended the war.

Many will judge the summit based on the weak language on nuclear weapons. Pyongyang’s nuclear and missile tests last year likely put it on the threshold of becoming a legitimate nuclear power.

The North, which has spent decades building its bombs despite crippling sanctions and near-constant internatio­nal condemnati­on, claims it has already risen to that level.

South Korean conservati­ve politician­s criticised the joint statement as letting North Korea off the hook by failing to secure a clear commitment on nuclear disarmamen­t.

But the Koreas made inroads on a raft of other points of friction.

Mr Moon agreed to visit the North Korean capital some time in the autumn, and both leaders said they would meet on a regular basis and exchange calls on a recently establishe­d hotline.

They agreed to settle a disagreeme­nt over their western maritime border by designatin­g it as a peace area and securing fishing activities for both countries.

They said they would open a permanent communicat­ion office in the North Korean border town of Kaesong and resume temporary reunions of relatives separated by the 1950-53 war.

“I feel like I’m firing a flare at the starting line in the moment of (the two Koreas) writing a new history in North-South relations, peace and prosperity,” Mr Kim told Mr Moon as they sat at a table built so that exactly 2018mm separated them.

Mr Moon responded that there were high expectatio­ns that they produce an agreement that will be a “big gift to the entire Korean nation and every peace-loving person in the world”.

 ?? Getty. ?? North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, left, and South Korean president Moon Jae-in at the border.
Getty. North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, left, and South Korean president Moon Jae-in at the border.

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