'Cuddled in Kim Jong Un’s arms': North
Koreans envisage unification ahead of summit
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[September 17, 2018]
By Josh Smith
PYONGYANG (Reuters) - Sixteen-year-old Ri
Jin Ryong, a member of North Korea's paramilitary Worker-Peasant Red
Guards militia, says he has one message for South Koreans if the two
countries ever reunite.
"I will spread the word about how wonderful it is to be in our dear
Marshal Kim Jong Un's arms," he told Reuters at Pyongyang's zoo, where
he and other soldiers were given a day of recreation after participating
in a grueling military parade before the North Korean leader on
September 9.
Ahead of this week's summit between Kim and South Korean President Moon
Jae-in in Pyongyang, North Korea is once again highlighting the idea of
reuniting the two countries divided since the 1940s, through state media
and major events.
In South Korea, however, the concept of unification has become
increasingly convoluted and viewed as unrealistic amid an ever-widening
gulf between the two nations.
“North Korea’s rhetoric gravitates around unification not because they
really believe in an immediate unification but it’s a powerful slogan
that gives justification for them to improve inter-Korean relations,"
said Lim Eul-chul, professor of North Korean studies at Kyungnam
University in Seoul.
"To South Koreans, the idea of unification is not as appealing because
it immediately reminds them of the burden of unification costs."
Days before hosting Moon for their third summit of the year, Kim Jong Un
said: "We should tear down this wall of conflict to meet the Korean
people’s constant ideals and demands to open a grand path for
unification," state newspaper Rodong Sinmun reported on Sunday.
"ONE COUNTRY, TWO SYSTEMS"
International sanctions over North Korea's nuclear weapons restrict many
cooperative projects and trade, a major obstacle to warming ties between
the two Koreas, let alone reunification.
But North Korean defectors are much more likely to support the idea than
their Southern neighbors, according to past surveys.
More than 95 percent of North Korean defectors who responded said
unification is needed, compared to about 53 percent for South Korean
respondents, one 2017 survey by the Seoul National University Institute
for Peace and Unification Studies showed.
For decades, North Koreans have pushed the concept of "one country, two
systems," under which the country would maintain different systems of
government in the North and South, at least until the two could be
peacefully reconciled.
"We understood that we should acknowledge differences between the North
and the South on ideology, religion, faith alike, and cooperate with
each other," one North Korean who defected to the South in 2013 spoke on
condition of anonymity.
"I also remember learning that unification would also help resolve our
economic difficulties."
North Korea's per capita Gross National Income of 1.46 million won
($1,283.52) is only about 4.4 percent that of South Korea, according to
estimates by the South's central bank. While projections of the cost of
reunification have ranged widely, running as high as $5 trillion, most
believe the cost would fall almost entirely on South Korea.
After the first meeting between leaders of the two Koreas in 2000, both
sides agreed to consider the idea of "one country, two systems", at
least as an interim step to unification.
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Participants perform around a globe highlighting Korean peninsula at
Mass Games in May Day stadium marking the 70th anniversary of North
Korea's foundation in Pyongyang, North Korea, September 9, 2018.
REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui
But on its website, the Institute for Unification Education, the
education arm of South Korea's Unification Ministry, said the
North's idea of a federation consisting of two regional governments
with different ideologies and systems "has little possibility of
becoming reality given no historical precedents."
"North Korea’s rhetoric concentrates on the unification between one
people ... but what it really means is that they think unification
between the Koreas justifies disregarding international relations
and sanctions," said Shin Beom-chul, senior fellow at the Asan
Institute for Policy Studies in Seoul.
"In a situation where there are U.N. and U.S. sanctions, it’s hard
to go along with that rhetoric for the South.”
Sanctions banning almost all trade with the isolated country have
hindered even basic bilateral exchanges between the neighbors. South
and North Korea opened a liaison office on Friday after weeks of
delay, as Seoul sought to address Washington's concerns about a
potential breach of sanctions.
Graphic: A land divided - https://tmsnrt.rs/2KdXMcS
"ONE BLOOD"
On the streets of Pyongyang, North Koreans interviewed by Reuters
uniformly supported the idea of unification, and just as uniformly,
said Kim Jong Un is making it more likely than ever.
"Under the dear leader's superior leadership, I believe the nation’s
unification could certainly become reality if the North and the
South cooperate from now on," said cashier Ri Hae Kyong, 53.
Like all the North Koreans interviewed by Reuters in Pyongyang, Ri
was speaking in front of the government minders who accompany media
everywhere, making it difficult to truly assess North Korean views
on unification.
Cosmetics clerk Yang Su Jong, 27, also said she believes "it’s not
long" before unification happens, in part because Kim had made North
Korea a "strong nuclear power."
And North Koreans said they see their Southern neighbors as family.
"North and South are one blood," Pyongyang waitress Song Jin A told
Reuters. "As a new generation, we want to live with our compatriots
in the South as one, (we) want to all live together cuddled in our
leader Kim Jong Un’s arms."
(Additional reporting by Cong Sun in Pyongyang, Hyonhee Shin,
Jeongmin Kim, Joori Roh and Heekyong Yang in Seoul. Editing by
Soyoung Kim and Lincoln Feast.)
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