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| The leaders of the two Koreas were in a jubilant mood after the successful summit (AFP Photo/Korea Summit Press Pool) |
The leaders of North and South Korea agreed on Friday to pursue a permanent peace treaty and the complete denuclearisation of their divided peninsula at a historic summit laden with symbolism.
The North's
leader Kim Jong Un and the South's President Moon Jae-in embraced after signing
what they called the Panmunjom Declaration, following a day that began with an
emotional handshake over the Military Demarcation Line that splits their countries.
The pair
issued a statement confirming their "common goal of realising, through
complete denuclearisation, a nuclear-free Korean peninsula".
They agreed
they would seek a permanent end to the Korean War this year, 65 years after
hostilities ended in an armistice rather than a peace treaty.
Moon would
visit Pyongyang in "the fall", the two leaders said, pledging to hold
"regular meetings and direct telephone conversations".
But Kim did
not mention denuclearisation and analysts warned that while the summit was a
good first step, similar promises had been made before and much remained to be
done to resolve the issue of the North's atomic arsenal.
In coming weeks, Kim is due to hold a much-anticipated meeting with US President Donald Trump -- who has demanded Pyongyang give up its weapons -- that will be crucial in shaping progress.
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The leaders
of the two Koreas were in a jubilant mood after the
successful summit (AFP
Photo/Laurence CHU)
|
In coming weeks, Kim is due to hold a much-anticipated meeting with US President Donald Trump -- who has demanded Pyongyang give up its weapons -- that will be crucial in shaping progress.
Trump
hailed the Korea summit as historic, but warned "only time will
tell".
He told
reporters he would not be "played" by the North's leader at their
upcoming meeting, with "two countries" now in the running to host the
summit.
Trump also
implicitly claimed credit for the Korean meeting, tweeting: "KOREAN WAR TO
END! The United States, and all of its GREAT people, should be very proud of
what is now taking place in Korea!"
But he also
offered a nod to his "good friend", Chinese President Xi Jinping, who
had provided "great help".
'Filled
with emotion'
The
Panmunjom Declaration capped an extraordinary day, unthinkable only months ago
as the nuclear-armed North carried out a series of missile launches and its
sixth atomic blast.
Kim and Trump had traded personal insults and threats of war, sending tensions soaring before Moon seized on the Winter Olympics to broker dialogue, beginning a dizzying whirl of diplomacy that led to Friday's meeting in the Demilitarized Zone.
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North
Korea's leader Kim Jong Un and South Korea's President Moon Jae-in held
a warm
embrace near the end of their historic summit (AFP Photo/Korea Summit
Press
Pool)
|
Kim and Trump had traded personal insults and threats of war, sending tensions soaring before Moon seized on the Winter Olympics to broker dialogue, beginning a dizzying whirl of diplomacy that led to Friday's meeting in the Demilitarized Zone.
Kim said he
was "filled with emotion" after stepping over the concrete blocks
that mark the border, making him the first Northern leader to set foot in the
South since the Korean War ceasefire in 1953.
At his
impromptu invitation, the two men briefly crossed hand-in-hand into the North
before beginning the summit, only the third of its kind.
During
another symbolic gesture, the two men took part in the ceremonial planting of a
pine tree.
It was a
far cry from the last tree-related operation Moon was on duty for in the DMZ --
a monumental show of force after North Korean soldiers killed two US officers
trying to prune a poplar in 1976, when he was a special forces soldier.
'Heart-wrenching division'
The truce
village of Panmunjom was the "symbol of heart-wrenching division",
Kim said, but if it became "a symbol of peace, the North and South that
have one blood, one language, one history and one culture, will return to
becoming one".
He pledged the two Koreas would ensure they did not "repeat the unfortunate history in which past inter-Korea agreements... fizzled out after beginning".
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North
Korea's leader Kim Jong Un walks with President Moon Jae-in after
crossing into
South Korea for an official summit at Peace House (AFP Photo/
Korea Summit Press
Pool)
|
He pledged the two Koreas would ensure they did not "repeat the unfortunate history in which past inter-Korea agreements... fizzled out after beginning".
In the
declaration, the two sides said they would seek meetings this year with the US
and possibly China -- both parties to the 1953 ceasefire -- "with a view
to declaring an end to the war, turning the armistice into a peace treaty, and
establishing a permanent and solid peace regime".
But
agreeing a treaty to formally close the conflict will be complicated -- both
Seoul and Pyongyang claim sovereignty over the whole Korean peninsula.
The two
previous Korean summits in 2000 and 2007, both in Pyongyang, also ended with
displays of affection and similar pledges, but the agreements ultimately came
to naught.
'First
step'
Moon
welcomed the North's announcement of a moratorium on nuclear testing and
long-range missile launches as "very significant", calling it
"an important step towards complete denuclearisation".
But how
much progress was made on the nuclear issue remained unclear.
Pyongyang has always insisted it needs nuclear weapons to defend itself against a US invasion, and is demanding still unspecified security guarantees to discuss its arsenal, while Washington is pressing it to give up its weapons in a complete, verifiable and irreversible way.
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| South Korea's President Moon Jae-in (2nd R) said the North's moratorium on nuclear and long-range missile tests is "very significant" (AFP Photo/Korea Summit Press Pool) |
Pyongyang has always insisted it needs nuclear weapons to defend itself against a US invasion, and is demanding still unspecified security guarantees to discuss its arsenal, while Washington is pressing it to give up its weapons in a complete, verifiable and irreversible way.
Affirming a
commitment to denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula was "not new",
said MIT political science professor Vipin Narang, "historic summit
notwithstanding".
But he
added: "Reaffirming it is better than not reaffirming it."
Paul Haenle
of the Carnegie-Tsinghua Center in Beijing said it was "really just the
first step in broader diplomatic efforts".
"Similar
to a game of chess, this move opens up a series of possible developments but in
many ways, the hard work really begins now."
After an
early dispatch saying Kim was heading for the summit, the North's state media
offered no further coverage of events, even as the leaders' handshake was
beamed around the world.
But at a
farewell ceremony, the two men watched images of their landmark encounter
beamed onto the summit venue in a sound-and-light show, standing hand-in-hand
for several minutes.
VIDEO: The inter-Korean summit has thrown up many memorable images, including those that highlight a certain chemistry between North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and the South's President Moon Jae-in pic.twitter.com/xMyGjNjuut— AFP news agency (@AFP) April 27, 2018





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