South Korea switches off propaganda
broadcasts, Moon upbeat on North Korea nuclear halt
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[April 23, 2018]
By Christine Kim
SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea halted the
propaganda broadcasts it blares across the border with North Korea on
Monday, aiming to set a positive tone ahead of the first summit in a
decade between their leaders as the U.S. president cautioned the nuclear
crisis was far from resolved.
The gesture came after North Korea said on Saturday it would immediately
suspend nuclear and missile tests, scrap its nuclear test site and
instead pursue economic growth and peace, a declaration welcomed be
world leaders.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is due to hold a summit with South
Korean President Moon Jae-In at the border truce village of Panmunjom on
Friday, and is expected to meet with President Donald Trump in late May
or early June.
"North Korea's decision to freeze its nuclear program is a significant
decision for the complete denuclearization of the Korean peninsula,"
South Korean President Moon Jae-in said in a regular meeting at the Blue
House on Monday.
"It is a green light that raises the chances of positive outcomes at the
North's summits with South Korea and the United States. If North Korea
goes the path of complete denuclearization starting from this, then a
bright future for North Korea can be guaranteed."
South Korea's propaganda broadcasts, which include a mix of news, Korean
pop songs, an criticism of the North Korean regime, were stopped at
midnight, the defense ministry in Seoul said. It didn't specify if they
would resume after the Kim-Moon summit.
"We hope this decision will lead both Koreas to stop mutual criticism
and propaganda against each other and also contribute in creating peace
and a new beginning," the South Korean defense ministry said.
It marks the first time in more than two years that the South's
broadcasts have fallen silent. North Korea has its own propaganda
loudspeakers at the border, but a defense ministry official said he
could not verify that they had also stopped.
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The two Koreas agreed to a schedule for Friday's summit in working-level
talks on Monday, South Korea's presidential Blue House said, adding
North Korea had agreed to allow South Korean reporters in its part of
the Joint Security Area at the border to cover the event.
Preparations for the talks will include a rehearsal by officials from
both countries at the border truce village of Panmunjom on Wednesday,
the Blue House said.
The inter-Korean talks and the expected Kim-Trump summit have raised
hopes of an easing in tensions that reached a crescendo last year amid a
flurry of North Korean missile tests and its largest nuclear test.
Trump initially welcomed Pyongyang's statement it would halt nuclear and
missile tests, but he sounded more cautious on Sunday.
"We are a long way from conclusion on North Korea, maybe things will
work out, and maybe they won't - only time will tell," Trump said on
Twitter.
Still, the shares of South Korean companies with business links to North
Korea rallied after Pyongyang's weekend announcement.
Shares of Good People <033340.KQ> and Shinwon Corp <009270.KS>, which
used to operate factories in North Korea's Kaesong industrial region
near the border, rose 8 percent and 15 percent, respectively.
China, North Korea's main ally, welcomed the North Korean announcement.
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People walk past a street monitor showing North Korea's leader Kim
Jong Un in a news report about North Korea's announcement, in Tokyo,
Japan, April 21, 2018. REUTERS/Toru Hanai
The Chinese government's top diplomat, State Councillor Wang Yi, told
reporters on Monday that North Korea's announcement at the weekend was
"great news".
"We cannot let any noise damage the continued improvements in the
situation on the peninsula and cannot allow anything to interfere in or
obstruct the talks process between the parties," Wang said, after talks
with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Beijing.
Editorials in Chinese state-run media were tempered with notes of
caution.
The China Daily, the official English-languages newspaper of the Chinese
government, said the pledges conveyed the message that Kim will sit down
for talks as the leader of a legitimate nuclear power.
"Negotiations about actual nuclear disarmament will likely prove arduous
given such weapons are critical to Pyongyang's sense of security. It
will require ironclad security guarantees if it is to relinquish them."
The Global Times, a hawkish tabloid newspaper run by the ruling
Communist Party's official People's Daily, said all parties "should
cherish this hard-won state of affairs" and continue to make efforts
toward peace and denuclearization.
"Washington should not regard North Korea's halt to nuclear and missile
tests as a result of its maximum pressure," the Global Times wrote.
"It must be attributed to multiple factors, one of which is that
Pyongyang has mastered certain advanced nuclear technologies and
successfully launched an intercontinental ballistic missile with a range
of more than 10,000 km."
The United States, through the United Nations, has pursued a series of
ever-tightening sanctions on North Korea aimed at cutting its access to
foreign currency.
Customs data on Monday showed China's imports from North Korea fell
sharply in the first three months of the year, and exports also dropped,
compared with a year earlier.
Tourism, dominated by Chinese visitors, remains a key export earner for
North Korea. China's foreign ministry said on Monday that 32 Chinese
tourists and four North Koreans had died in a major bus accident in
North Korea, with two Chinese nationals seriously injured and left in
critical condition.
(Reporting by Christine Kim in SEOUL and Doina Chiacu in WASHINGTON.
Additional reporting by Phil Stewart and David Morgan in WASHINGTON,
John Ruwich in SHANGHAI, Ben Blanchard in BEIJING, Cynthia Kim and
Heekyong Yang in SEOUL. Editing by Lincoln Feast, Michael Perry and Neil
Fullick)
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