South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol asked China to play a more active, constructive role in curbing the nuclear threat from North Korea when he met Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) on Tuesday at the G20 summit in Indonesia, officials said.
Xi told Yoon that he hopes South Korea will try to improve its ties with rival North Korea, Yoon’s office said, in a reflection of the two countries’ divergent views on North Korea.
The Yoon-Xi meeting on the sidelines of the G20, the first summit between the leaders of the two countries since December 2019, came after North Korea test-launched dozens of missiles, many of them nuclear-capable, in the past few weeks.
Photo: EPA-EFE
Some experts say North Korea has been able to continue its barrage of missile tests in part because China and Russia have opposed efforts by the US and its allies to adopt new UN sanctions against the North. Washington is locked in a strategic competition with Beijing and in a confrontation with Moscow over its invasion of Ukraine.
China, North Korea’s biggest source of aid and its economic lifeline, is believed to have the greatest leverage over North Korea.
However, it is suspected of not fully enforcing UN sanctions on North Korea and of shipping clandestine assistance to help keep afloat its impoverished socialist ally, which it views as a bulwark against US influence on the Korean Peninsula.
During his meeting with Xi, “President Yoon said he hopes that China would play a more active, constructive role [on the North Korean issue] as its neighbor and a member of the UN Security Council, after noting that North Korea has recently escalated nuclear and missile threats by launching provocations with an unprecedented frequency,” Yoon’s office said in a statement.
Xi said China and South Korea have common interests on the Korean Peninsula and both nations must safeguard peace.
He also said he hopes that South Korea will seek better relations with North Korea, Yoon’s office said.
A Chinese government statement on the meeting did not say whether the two leaders discussed North Korea.
According to the Chinese statement, Xi said China is ready to work with South Korea to boost bilateral ties and provide greater stability for the region and the world.
It quoted Xi as stressing the need for the two countries to increase strategic communications and political trust.
Yoon’s office also said the South Korean leader proposed that the two countries hold regular high-level talks to jointly respond to the COVID-19 pandemic, the global economic slump and climate issues.
It said Xi agreed on the need for high-level dialogue.
Since taking office in May, Yoon, a conservative, has been seeking to solidify his country’s military alliance with the US and participate in US-led regional initiatives.
Yoon’s government has repeatedly said such moves would not target China, its biggest trading partner.
Some analysts say Yoon’s tilt toward Washington could trigger economic retaliation by China, as it did in 2017 when South Korea allowed the US to install a missile defense system in its territory that Beijing views as a security threat.
However, others say China would likely be cautious about further economic retaliation, because it would push South Korea closer to the US and worsen anti-Chinese sentiment in South Korea.
THE ‘MONSTER’: The Philippines on Saturday sent a vessel to confront a 12,000-tonne Chinese ship that had entered its exclusive economic zone The Philippines yesterday said it deployed a coast guard ship to challenge Chinese patrol boats attempting to “alter the existing status quo” of the disputed South China Sea. Philippine Coast Guard spokesman Commodore Jay Tarriela said Chinese patrol ships had this year come as close as 60 nautical miles (111km) west of the main Philippine island of Luzon. “Their goal is to normalize such deployments, and if these actions go unnoticed and unchallenged, it will enable them to alter the existing status quo,” he said in a statement. He later told reporters that Manila had deployed a coast guard ship to the area
RISING TENSIONS: The nations’ three leaders discussed China’s ‘dangerous and unlawful behavior in the South China Sea,’ and agreed on the importance of continued coordination Japan, the Philippines and the US vowed to further deepen cooperation under a trilateral arrangement in the face of rising tensions in Asia’s waters, the three nations said following a call among their leaders. Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr and outgoing US President Joe Biden met via videoconference on Monday morning. Marcos’ communications office said the leaders “agreed to enhance and deepen economic, maritime and technology cooperation.” The call followed a first-of-its-kind summit meeting of Marcos, Biden and then-Japanese prime minister Fumio Kishida in Washington in April last year that led to a vow to uphold international
US president-elect Donald Trump is not typically known for his calm or reserve, but in a craftsman’s workshop in rural China he sits in divine contemplation. Cross-legged with his eyes half-closed in a pose evoking the Buddha, this porcelain version of the divisive US leader-in-waiting is the work of designer and sculptor Hong Jinshi (洪金世). The Zen-like figures — which Hong sells for between 999 and 20,000 yuan (US$136 to US$2,728) depending on their size — first went viral in 2021 on the e-commerce platform Taobao, attracting national headlines. Ahead of the real-estate magnate’s inauguration for a second term on Monday next week,
‘PLAINLY ERRONEOUS’: The justice department appealed a Trump-appointed judge’s blocking of the release of a report into election interference by the incoming president US Special Counsel Jack Smith, who led the federal cases against US president-elect Donald Trump on charges of trying to overturn his 2020 election defeat and mishandling of classified documents, has resigned after submitting his investigative report on Trump, an expected move that came amid legal wrangling over how much of that document can be made public in the days ahead. The US Department of Justice disclosed Smith’s departure in a footnote of a court filing on Saturday, saying he had resigned one day earlier. The resignation, 10 days before Trump is inaugurated, follows the conclusion of two unsuccessful criminal prosecutions