Koreas agree to hold summit in Pyongyang
PANMUNJOM/SEOUL. - South and North Korea agreed yesterday to hold a summit meeting between their leaders in Pyongyang in September.
The agreement was made during highlevel talks on the northern side of Panmunjom that separates the two Koreas. They, however, did not unveil the date of the meeting.
“We agreed to hold an inter-Korean summit within September in Pyongyang” the two Koreas said in a joint press statement issued after the meeting.
North Korea’s chief delegate, Ri Songwon, hinted after the meeting that the two sides agreed on a date but decided not to announce it, only to emphasise that the summit will take place “within September”.
The summit meeting, if held, will mark the third of its kind between South Korean President Moon Jae-in and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un following their faceto-face meetings in April and May. It will also mark the first time in more than a decade for an inter-Korean summit to be held in the North’s capital, with the last one held in 2007.
In the April summit, the two leaders agreed to meet again in Pyongyang this fall. Yesterday’s talks came amid worries that the denuclearisation process seems to have been in a stalemate since the June 12 summit in Singapore between North Korea and the United States.
Washington and Pyongyang are accusing each other of dragging their feet in implementing what their leaders agreed on at the historic summit.
The US has urged the North to speed up its denuclearisation efforts, while the North has argued that the process should be carried out in a simultaneous and phased manner. Pressure appears to be mounting on South Korea to play a constructive role in breaking the logjam in talks on North Korea’s nuclear weapons program.
During yesterday’s talks, the two Koreas also discussed what has been implemented since their previous summits, especially on their promised efforts to expand cross-border exchanges and cooperation.
They have been at odds with the speed and scope of inter-Korean exchanges, though there have been a flurry of talks on details on cooperation in various areas, including railways, roads and sports.
The North has voiced frustration with the slower-than-expected pace in progress on those fronts. The Seoul government appears reluctant to push for full-blown cooperation with the North, constrained by multi-layered sanctions imposed on Pyongyang.
Another possible agenda item for the high-level talks is to declare a formal end to the 1950-53 Korean War, which their leaders agreed to complete by the end of this year. The North has called for Seoul to fulfil its promise of declaring an end to the war as soon as possible, while the US has said that the North should take meaningful denuclearisation steps first. It was not clear whether the issue was brought up during the latest talks.
“We reviewed the implementation situations of the Panmunjom Declaration and held consultations in a sincere manner on matters related to its more active enforcement,” the two sides said after the talks, referring to the agreement reached in the historic April summit
South Korea’s delegation was led by Unification Minister Cho Myoung-gyon. His North Korean counterpart was Ri, chairman of the Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of the Country.