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| North Korea's Kim Jong Un kicked off an official 'Goodwill visit' to Vietnam after his summit with US President Donald Trump |
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un kicked off an official visit to Vietnam Friday, three days after arriving in the country for a nuclear summit with US President Donald Trump that ended deadlocked.
Kim put
aside the troubled negotiations for the pageantry of a formal diplomatic
occasion in Hanoi, where -- accompanied by his sister and close aide Kim Yo
Jong -- he was received by Vietnam President and Communist Party chief Nguyen
Phu Trong.
The smiling
leader walked before rows of children waving Vietnamese and North Korean flags
outside the mustard-yellow colonial-era Presidential Palace, before inspecting
an honour guard.
The
long-isolated North is increasingly seeking to portray itself as a country like
any other, and Vietnam is Kim's fourth foreign destination in less than 12
months, after not leaving his borders for more than six years following his
inheritance of power.
He has
travelled to China four times for meetings with President Xi Jinping, walked
across the border with South Korea for a summit with President Moon Jae-in, and
went to Singapore for his first summit with Trump.
But for
protocol purposes Kim's trips do not rank as state visits, as he is not North
Korea's head of state -- his grandfather Kim Il Sung retains the title of
Eternal President even though he died in 1994.
Instead Kim
is officially chairman of the ruling Workers' Party of Korea and chairman of
the State Affairs Commission, although he is most commonly referred to as the
"Supreme Leader".
The North's
state KCNA news agency described it as an "official goodwill visit"
to Vietnam.
Curious
onlookers lined the streets Friday to catch a glimpse of Kim -- the first North
Korean leader to visit Vietnam since his grandfather in 1964.
But not all
were impressed.
"The
summit failed. I don't know how much Vietnam has spent on this, but it must be
a lot," Hanoi resident Tu Mai, 40, told AFP.
Train journey
The North
Korean leader later met the head of the southeast Asian country's rubber stamp
parliament, Nguyen Thi Kim Ngan, telling her that the warm relationship between
their nations was established by Kim Il Sung and Vietnam's revolutionary leader
Ho Chi Minh.
"I was
deeply moved by the fervent welcome from the Vietnamese people and felt our
70-year history of friendly ties," Kim said.
During the
Cold War, Vietnam and North Korea were both members of the Communist bloc, with
Pyongyang sending Hanoi pilots and psychological warfare specialists to help it
in the Vietnam War.
Hanoi has
since embraced market economics and been rewarded with rapid growth, while it
now counts the US as an ally.
Kim is
expected to lay wreaths at the Ho Chi Minh mausoleum and war martyrs monument
on Saturday ahead of his planned departure by train for the marathon return
journey home.
Kim
undertook a 4,000-kilometre (2,500-mile) two-and-a-half day rail journey
through China to Vietnam to attend the summit.
The streets
of Hanoi have been lined with heavy security along with military equipment and
armoured vehicles for the summit, and some said it was exhausting work.
"It's
tiring, we've been on high alert for two weeks now," a police officer told
AFP.
"I really
wish it would end soon as it really disrupts people's lives."
North
Korea's Kim Jong Un kicked off an official 'Goodwill visit' to Vietnam after
his summit with US President Donald Trump.
VIDEO: Vietnamese President Nguyen Phu Trong holds a welcoming ceremony for the North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at the Presidential Palace in Hanoi pic.twitter.com/9lG6TwujWl— AFP news agency (@AFP) March 1, 2019

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