Tokyo (AFP)
- A Nobel Prize-winning anti-nuclear group offered Monday to pay for next week's
historic summit between the US and North Korea -- including the delicate issue
of Kim Jong Un's hotel bill.
Who will
cough up for lodgings at the five-star Fullerton Hotel, believed to be the
North Korean leader's preferred option, is one of many reported logistical and
protocol headaches surrounding this month's meeting between Kim and US
President Donald Trump.
The United
States is prepared to pay but fears offending cash-poor but pride-rich North
Korea, the Washington Post wrote last week.
The
International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) said it was willing to
help resolve the impasse by bankrolling Kim's delegation, using part of the
$1.1 million cash prize it received for winning last year's Nobel Peace Prize.
"We
are ready to shoulder the cost of the summit, naturally including expenses for
accommodation and conference venues," Akira Kawasaki, an ICAN
representative in Japan, told AFP.
"If
holding the summit is in danger because of financial problems, we are ready to
shoulder the cost as it is an important, historic meeting," he added.
Kawasaki
declined to say how much ICAN could stump up but said part of the Nobel Prize
award would be put to the summit "in order to support peace in the Korean
peninsula and a nuclear weapon-free world".
The sum
would be negotiated if North Korea accepted the offer, he said.
The
presidential suite at the Fullerton boasts, according to its website, a baby
grand piano and claims to be "the most exclusive hotel suite in
Singapore."
With a
private elevator offering exclusive access, the suite is 201 square metres
(2,164 square feet) and reportedly costs more than $6,000 for one night.
Reporters
camped outside the hotel last week to catch a glimpse of Kim Chang Son, Kim's
de facto chief of staff, who travelled to Singapore to lay the groundwork for
the June 12 summit.
The
Singapore dialogue will be the first time a sitting US president has met a
North Korean leader.
Talks are
expected to focus on denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula and improving
relations between Washington and Pyongyang.
North Korea's 'military reshuffle' could be aimed at eliminating resistance to recent peace overtures with the US, analysts say https://t.co/xpR6KfCTa4— AFP news agency (@AFP) June 4, 2018

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