Yahoo – AFP,
Giles Hewitt, 16 Nov 2015
.
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UN
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, pictured on November 15, 2015, will be the
first
head of the world body to visit North Korea in more than 20 years (AFP
Photo/
Ozan Kose)
|
Seoul (AFP)
- UN chief Ban Ki-moon will visit North Korea this week for a likely meeting
with the nuclear-armed state's diplomatically reclusive leader, Kim Jong-Un,
South Korea's Yonhap news agency reported Monday.
If the trip
goes ahead, Ban would be the first UN secretary general to set foot in the
North for more than 20 years, and the first international leader to meet Kim
since he formally assumed power nearly four years ago.
Citing an
unidentified high-level UN source, Yonhap said Ban would visit Pyongyang in his
official capacity later this week, though no precise dates were given.
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Since
taking over power following the death
of his father Kim Jong-Il in 2011, Kim
Jong-Un has yet to receive a single head
of state, and has not travelled
outside
of North Korea (AFP Photo)
|
The UN
source told Yonhap that Ban was almost certain to meet with Kim Jong-Un -- a
meeting which, if it happens, would mark a major diplomatic opening by
Pyongyang.
Since
taking over the leadership following the death of his father Kim Jong-Il in
2011, Kim has yet to receive a single head of state, and has not travelled
outside the country.
The young
leader has received a number of high-ranking Chinese officials in Pyongyang,
but the most prominent foreigner he has met in the past four years is probably
the former NBA basketball star, Dennis Rodman.
A noted
breach of protocol saw Kim snub the president of Mongolia who visited Pyongyang
in 2013.
"There
can't be such a situation where the UN secretary general visits North Korea and
does not meet with the supreme leader of the UN member state," the UN
source said.
Earlier
plans scuttled
Ban had
been scheduled to visit North Korea in May this year, when Pyongyang invited
him to tour the joint North-South Kaesong Industrial Zone, which lies just over
the inter-Korean border.
Pyongyang
withdrew the invitation at the last minute after Ban criticised a recent North
Korean missile test.
There are
concerns that the North is now preparing another missile test, after it
reportedly issued a no-sail notice to shipping off its east coast until
December 7.
Two UN
secretary generals have visited North Korea in the past -- Kurt Waldheim in
1979 and, in 1993, Boutros Boutros-Ghali who met with then leader Kim Il-Sung
to discuss tensions over Pyongyang's nuclear ambitions.
Analysts
said North Korea would use the visit to flag its willingness to engage with the
international community at a time when it is under fire over its nuclear
weapons programme and human rights record.
"Pyongyang
will also try to argue that the United States and South Korea have been behind
the recent strains in inter-Korean relations, and that the North was open to
dialogue all along," said Hong Hyun-Ik, an analyst at the Sejong Institute
think tank in Seoul.
"I
think Kim will meet him personally in order to talk up what he sees as his
achievements with North Korea's economy," Hong said.
Earlier this month, the leaders of South Korea, China and Japan held their first summit for more than three years in Seoul.
Growing isolation
The North's invitation might also have been prompted by diplomatic shifts in the region that have left North Korea looking more isolated than ever, with Seoul moving closer to Pyongyang's main diplomatic and economic ally China, and improving strained relations with Tokyo.
The North's invitation might also have been prompted by diplomatic shifts in the region that have left North Korea looking more isolated than ever, with Seoul moving closer to Pyongyang's main diplomatic and economic ally China, and improving strained relations with Tokyo.
Earlier this month, the leaders of South Korea, China and Japan held their first summit for more than three years in Seoul.
Although
the focus was on trade and other economic issues, the three declared their
"firm opposition" to the development of nuclear weapons on the North
Korean peninsula.
North Korea
is already under a raft of UN sanctions imposed after its three nuclear tests
in 2006, 2009 and 2013.
It has also
come under increasing pressure on the human rights front, following a report
published last year by a UN commission which concluded North Korea was
committing human rights violations "without parallel in the contemporary
world".
It will not
be Ban's first visit to the North. He crossed the border to visit the joint
industrial zone of Kaesong with a delegation of foreign diplomats in 2006 when
he was South Korea's foreign minister.
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