S.Korea's Yoon suggests 'audacious' economic plan if N.Korea abandons
nukes
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[May 10, 2022] By
Hyonhee Shin
SEOUL (Reuters) -South Korea's new
president, Yoon Suk-yeol, said on Tuesday that North Korea's weapons
programmes pose a threat but that he is ready to provide an "audacious"
economic plan if the North is committed to denuclearisation.
Yoon gave the remarks in his inauguration speech after being sworn in at
a ceremony in Seoul. He won a tight election in March as the standard
bearer of the main conservative People Power Party, less than a year
after entering politics following a 26-year career as a prosecutor.
Yoon, 61, will face two major problems as he takes office: a belligerent
North Korea testing new weapons and inflation threatening to undermine
an economic recovery from two years of COVID-19 gloom.
He has signalled a tougher line on North Korea, warning of a preemptive
strike if there is a sign of an imminent attack and vowing to strengthen
the South's deterrent capability. But his speech was seen as focused
more on his willingness to reopen stalled denuclearisation talks with
Pyongyang.
"While North Korea's nuclear weapon programs are a threat not only to
our security and that of Northeast Asia, the door to dialogue will
remain open so that we can peacefully resolve this threat," Yoon said.
"If North Korea genuinely embarks on a process to complete
denuclearisation, we are prepared to work with the international
community to present an audacious plan that will vastly strengthen North
Korea's economy and improve the quality of life for its people," he
added.
Yoon did not elaborate on his re-engagement or economic plan for the
North. But his national security adviser, Kim Sung-han, told Reuters in
February that his team would devise a roadmap in early days in which
Pyongyang could quickly earn sanctions relief or economic aid in
exchange for denuclearisation measures.
Yoon could face a security crisis if North Korea carries out its first
nuclear test in five years, as U.S. and South Korean officials warned,
after it broke a 2017 moratorium on long-range missile testing in March.
NO MORE BLUE HOUSE
Yoon won the election on a platform of fighting corruption and creating
a more level economic playing field amid deepening public frustration
with inequality and housing prices, as well as simmering gender and
generational rivalry.
South Korea's inflation hit a more than 13-year high last month as
Russia's invasion of Ukraine sent commodity prices soaring, which could
dampen growth prospects.
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South Korea's new President Yoon Suk-yeol waves to his supporters
while leaving after attending his inauguration ceremony at the
National Assembly in Seoul, South Korea, May 10, 2022. Yonhap via
REUTERS
Yoon did not mention inflation, but cited low growth,
rising unemployment and wage gaps as key economic challenges,
pledging to address those by focusing on developing science,
technology and innovation.
Some 40,000 people attended the ceremony on the front lawn of
parliament, including about 300 foreign guests, including Chinese
Vice President Wang Qishan, Japanese Foreign Minister Yoshimasa
Hayashi, and Douglas Emhoff, the husband of U.S. Vice President
Kamala Harris.
Wang, at a meeting with Yoon, relayed Chinese President Xi Jinping’s
letter and invitation to China, and expressed Beijing’s hopes for
stronger cooperation on North Korea, bilateral and global issues.
Yoon separately met Hayashi and thanked him for conveying a letter
from Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, saying he hoped to meet him soon
and work together to improve relations.
Yoon promised stronger support for the U.S. alliance to Emhoff, who
also delivered a letter from President Joe Biden and said Biden was
looking forward to their first summit, scheduled for this month, and
was hoping for closer cooperation.
After the inauguration, Yoon moved to a new office at a former
defence ministry building, holding his first meeting with aides and
appointing seven cabinet nominees who had passed their confirmation
hearings, including finance and defence ministers.
He has moved the presidential office and residence from the
traditional Blue House under a $40 million plan, though his
predecessor Moon Jae-in criticised it as rushed and a national
security risk.
A separate event was held at the Blue House, where 74 citizens
selected by lottery entered the long enclosed complex, which was
opened to the public for the first time in 74 years.
Yoon had called the office a "symbol of absolute power," and said it
would be used as a public park and cultural space.
(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin;Editing by Robert Birsel, Gerry Doyle and
Raissa Kasolowsky)
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