NORTH KOREA'S KIM MET CHINA'S XI ON FIRST FOREIGN TRIP
North Korea's Kim Jong Un has made his first ever foreign trip as leader to meet China's president, vowing he is “committed to denuclearisation” |
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un was treated to
a lavish welcome by Chinese President Xi Jinping during a secretive trip to
Beijing as both sides seek to repair frayed ties ahead of landmark summits with
Seoul and Washington.
On his
first trip abroad since taking power, Kim and his wife were met with honour
guards and a banquet hosted by Xi, according to state media, which confirmed
the visit on Wednesday only after Kim had returned to North Korea.
The two
men held talks at the imposing Great Hall of the People during which they
hailed their nations' historic relations, with Kim pledging that he was
"committed to the denuclearisation" of the Korean peninsula,
according to China's Xinhua news agency.
"There is no question that my
first foreign visit would be to the Chinese capital," Kim said, according
to North Korea's official KCNA news agency.
"This is my solemn duty as
someone who should value and continue the DPRK-PRC relations through
generations."
KCNA said Xi accepted an invitation to
visit Pyongyang, which would be his first trip to the North Korean capital
since he took power in 2012.
The two men had not met since Kim took
over after the death of his father, Kim Jong Il, in 2011, but Xi underscored
the importance of developing ties, saying it was "a strategic choice and
the only right choice," according to Xinhua.
The Chinese leader said he was willing
to maintain frequent contact with Kim "under the new circumstances".
Xi and Kim, flanked by officials, sat
across from each other at a long conference table at the Great Hall of the
People, according to television images which showed the North Korean leader
taking meticulous notes.
Later, Xi and his wife, Peng Liyuan,
waved goodbye while Kim and his spouse, Ri Sol Ju, smiled as they left in a
black car.
Analysts said Xi likely wanted to see
Kim to ensure North Korea does not cut a deal with US President Donald Trump
that hurts Chinese interests during a summit that is expected to be held in
May.
Beijing had appeared sidelined by
Pyongyang's approaches to Seoul and Washington, but Kim's visit puts China
firmly back at the centre of the diplomatic game.
"It shows that at this crucial
juncture, Kim and Xi believed that it was time to seize the opportunity to
consult," Bonnie Glaser, a China expert at the Washington-based Center for
Strategic and International Studies, told AFP.
"Both likely concluded that
further deterioration in relations would be harmful."
Deng Yuwen, an independent Chinese
international relations scholar, said that North Korea needed to turn to its
old ally ahead of the US summit, as Kim will be skeptical that Trump will
guarantee the security of his regime.
"North Korea needs the big
brother to protect it at a crucial moment," Deng said.
TRUMP INFORMED
Xinhua said Kim expressed his
willingness to hold summits with Trump and South Korean President Moon Jae-in.
"The issue of de-nuclearisation
of the Korean Peninsula can be resolved, if South Korea and the United States
respond to our efforts with goodwill, create an atmosphere of peace and
stability while taking progressive and synchronous measures for the realisation
of peace," Kim said, according to Xinhua.
South Korea said last month after
talks with Kim in Pyongyang that he would consider abandoning his nuclear
weapons in exchange for US security guarantees and flagged a halt to all
missile and nuclear tests while talks were under way.
White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders
said Trump received a personal note from Xi about Kim's visit on Tuesday.
"We see this development as
further evidence that our campaign of maximum pressure is creating the
appropriate atmosphere for dialogue with North Korea," Sanders said.
Confirmation of the visit ended 24
hours of speculation about the identity of a mysterious North Korean visitor
after Japanese media spotted a green train, similar to the one used by Kim's
father, arriving in Beijing on Monday and departing the following day.
While Chinese officials refused to
confirm Kim's presence, a heavy police presence at key venues, motorcades
driven under police escort, and barricades in the city centre fuelled the
belief that Kim had come to pay his respects.
FRAYED TIES
His visit to China, which KCNA said
ran from Sunday to Wednesday, came as a surprise given the state of relations
between the Cold War-era allies, which fought together in the 1950-53 Korean
War.
China chaired six-party talks on North
Korea that collapsed a decade ago, but its call to revive that forum have not
been heeded so far and it appeared to be on the margins when South Korea
announced that Kim had offered to meet with Moon and Trump.
Frustrated by its neighbour's nuclear
weapons programme and under pressure from Trump, China has backed a raft of UN
sanctions, using its economic leverage to squeeze Kim's regime.
At the same time, Beijing fears the
collapse of the regime in Pyongyang and the instability it would bring,
potentially sending waves of refugees into China and the possibility of US
troops stationed on its border in a unified Korea.
The tensions prompted North Korea's
official news agency to issue a rare critique of China last year, warning of
"grave consequences" if Pyongyang's patience was tested further.
But Kim's visit appears to have put
relations appear back on track, with Xi inviting Kim and his wife to visit
China again.
SOURCE: AFP
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