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| An ultramodern city-state, Singapore has robust security infrastructure and is widely considered one of the safest cities in Asia (AFP Photo/Roslan RAHMAN) |
Singapore
(AFP) - It has one foot in the East and one in the West, is ultra-modern,
secure and sometimes mocked as being a little dull -- Singapore was the safe
pick for a historic first meeting between the unpredictable leaders of the US
and North Korea.
US
President Donald Trump on Thursday confirmed that the summit -- a first between
a sitting US president and a North Korean leader -- would take place in
Singapore on June 12.
"We
will both try to make it a very special moment for World Peace!" he
tweeted.
Singapore
also confirmed it would host the meeting, but did not give further details.
"We
hope this meeting will advance prospects for peace in the Korean
Peninsula," the country's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement
late Thursday.
It followed
a second visit to Pyongyang by US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Wednesday
to make arrangements for the summit.
The
Southeast Asian financial hub was likely chosen for its neutrality, security
advantages and track record of hosting international summits, observers say.
The
ultramodern city-state has a robust security infrastructure and is widely
considered one of the safest cities in Asia.
It has
tight restrictions over media and public gatherings, which will allow for a
controlled environment likely to be preferred by the North Koreans.
Singapore
is also in the rare position of having friendly diplomatic ties with both
Washington and Pyongyang.
It
considers the US a close partner, while North Korea maintains a fully
functioning embassy in the city-state.
Singapore
and the North have a long history of cooperation -- the first law firm and fast
food restaurant in Pyongyang were both set up by Singaporeans -- even if
relations hit a snag last year when Singapore enforced new UN sanctions on
trade.
Singapore
will also be acceptable to China, North Korea's only major ally, which wields a
strong influence despite its physical absence from next month's proceedings.
"As a
neutral, and objective country with much-admired consistent foreign policy
principles and a small state with no desire or capacity to harm other states
and their interests, Singapore fits that bill well," said Lim Tai Wei,
adjunct research fellow at the National University of Singapore's East Asia
Institute.
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Since Kim
took over as leader, he has rarely left his isolated nation and has only
officially ventured away from home this year, with two visits to China (AFP
Photo/CCTV)
|
'No
baggage'
By apparently
agreeing to meet Trump 5,000 kilometres (3,100 miles) away from Pyongyang, Kim
has to travel a significant distance out of his comfort zone, said Graham
Ong-Webb, a research fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International
Studies (RSIS).
Since Kim
took over as leader, he has rarely left his isolated nation and has only
officially ventured away from home this year, with two visits to China, most
recently travelling to the northeastern port city of Dalian where he met Xi
Jinping.
He also
stepped across the border into South Korea during a historic meeting with
President Moon Jae-in in April, making him the first Northern leader to set
foot in the South since the Korean War ceasefire in 1953.
Remarkable
images of the two leaders greeting each other warmly over the Military
Demarcation Line that splits their countries, rich with symbolism and high
political theatre, were broadcast around the world.
Trump had
previously suggested that the demilitarised zone between the two Koreas could
be a venue for his meeting with Kim, before ruling it out on Wednesday.
Nearby
Mongolia was also ruled out as a possible neutral third-country venue,
reportedly for security reasons.
But for
Trump and Kim, Singapore is a convenient venue precisely because it
"doesn't have the historical or political baggage," said Sarah Teo,
an associate research fellow at RSIS's regional security architecture
programme.
Singapore
also has a track record for hosting international summits.
In 2015,
the city-state played host to a historic meeting between China's president Xi
and then Taiwanese president Ma Ying Jeou.
It hosts
the annual Shangri-La Dialogue, a defence forum regularly attended by heads of
state, defence ministers and high level military officials.
Now that
the venue and date have been chosen, it only remains to be seen if Singapore
will play host to a meeting that truly builds on hopes for the complete
denuclearisation of the peninsula and a formal peace treaty to end the 1950-53
Korean War.
#UPDATE US President Donald Trump has announced his historic summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un will take place in Singapore on June 12 https://t.co/iS1X9RtzU4— AFP news agency (@AFP) May 10, 2018


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