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| South Korean President Moon Jae-in has sought to use the Pyeongchang Games to open dialogue between Washington and Pyongyang (AFP Photo) |
Seoul (AFP)
- The most senior South Koreans to travel to North Korea for more than a decade
met leader Kim Jong Un Monday, a Seoul official said, the latest step in an
Olympics-driven rapprochement on the divided peninsula.
The
delegation, representing the South's President Moon Jae-in, is pushing for
talks between the nuclear-armed regime and the United States, after Kim sent
his sister Kim Yo Jong to the Winter Games in the South.
"Chairman
Kim Jong Un is currently hosting a dinner for the special envoys," Moon's
spokesman told a press briefing Monday evening, Yonhap news agency reported.
Kim Yo
Jong's trip was the first visit to the South by a member of the North's ruling
dynasty since the end of the 1950-53 Korean War, and her appearance at the
Games' opening ceremony -- where athletes from the two Koreas marched together
-- made global headlines.
Moon has
sought to use the Pyeongchang Games to open dialogue between Washington and
Pyongyang in hopes of easing a nuclear standoff that has heightened fears over
global security.
In Seoul,
Kim Yo Jong invited him to a summit in Pyongyang on her brother's behalf. But
Moon did not immediately accept, saying the right conditions were necessary
first.
Before
leaving for Pyongyang, the South's national security advisor Chung Eui-yong
said: "We plan to hold in-depth discussions for ways to continue not only
inter-Korean talks but dialogue between North Korea and the international
community including the United States."
It is a
challenging task -- in defiance of UN sanctions, the isolated and impoverished
North last year staged its most powerful nuclear test and test-fired several
missiles, some of them capable of reaching the US mainland.
US
President Donald Trump dubbed Kim "Little Rocket Man" and boasted
about the size of his own nuclear button, while the North Korean leader called
Trump a "mentally deranged US dotard".
They traded
threats of war and sent tensions soaring before a thaw in the run-up to the
Winter Olympics.
"We
will deliver President Moon's firm resolution to denuclearise the Korean
peninsula and to create sincere and lasting peace," delegation leader
Chung told reporters.
Chung is
one of five senior officials who flew to Pyongyang on Monday.
It was the
first ministerial-level South Korean visit to the North since December 2007,
when Seoul's then-intelligence chief travelled to Pyongyang.
Conservative
Lee Myung-bak was elected the South's president the following day and took a
markedly harder line on relations with the North.
Washington connection
Monday's
delegation included spy chief Suh Hoon, who is a veteran in dealings with the
North. He is known to have been deeply involved in negotiations to arrange two
previous inter-Korean summits in 2000 and 2007.
The North's
official Korean Central News Agency also announced their impending visit in a
one-paragraph dispatch.
The
10-member group -- five top delegates and five supporting officials -- will
return to Seoul on Tuesday.
Other
members include Suh's deputy at the National Intelligence Service as well as
Chun Hae-sung, the vice minister in Seoul's unification ministry which handles
cross-border affairs.
The
delegation will fly to the US on Wednesday to explain the result of the two-day
trip to officials in Washington, according to the South's presidential office.
Moon, who
advocates dialogue with the North's nuclear-armed regime, said last week that
Washington needs to "lower the threshold for talks" with Pyongyang.
But the US
has ruled out any possibility of talks before the North takes steps towards
denuclearisation, and imposed what Trump hailed as the "toughest
ever" sanctions on Kim's regime late last month.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un shakes hands with South Korean chief delegate Chung Eui-yong in Pyongyang pic.twitter.com/w0FtgJd7zA— AFP news agency (@AFP) March 6, 2018
China urges North and South Korea to "seize the current opportunity" to denuclearise peninsula at historic summit https://t.co/2P8JD15lKT pic.twitter.com/3Y0FQNcAOG— AFP news agency (@AFP) March 7, 2018

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