Showing posts with label Korea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Korea. Show all posts

Thursday, 15 October 2015

North Korea says ready for war with US as it marks anniversary

Long-range missiles roll down a street in Pyongyang as part of a military parade Oct. 10 to mark the 70th anniversary of the founding of North Korea's ruling Workers' Party. © Kyodo
PYONGYANG (Reuters) -- Isolated North Korea marked the 70th anniversary of its ruling Workers' Party on Saturday with a massive military parade overseen by leader Kim Jong Un, who said his country was ready to fight any war waged by the United States.
     Thousands of troops stood at attention under a blue autumn sky in Pyongyang's main Kim Il Sung Square, named after Kim Jong Un's grandfather and the founder of the nation, as Kim, appearing relaxed and confident, made his speech, leaning heavily on the lectern.
     The young leader was accompanied by senior Chinese Communist Party official Liu Yunshan, with whom he was seen speaking throughout the event and occasionally shared laughs, and flanked by senior North Korean party and military officials.
     "The party's revolutionary armament means we are ready to fight any kind of war waged by the U.S. imperialists," Kim said in a speech strikingly more forceful than previous public comments, praising the feats of past leaders and the ruling party.
     He made no direct mention of the country's nuclear programme, likely a conciliatory diplomatic gesture towards China, which hosted the now-defunct "six-party talks", also involving the United States, on giving economic incentives to Pyongyang in return for scrapping its atomic ambitions.
     On Wednesday, a high-level U.S. military official said Washington believed North Korea had the capability to launch a nuclear weapon against the U.S. mainland and stood ready to defend against any such attacks.
     Kim's speech was followed by troops marching in formation, first by a corps of soldiers dressed in the style of the revolutionary force that fought Japan during World War Two, and then a procession of military might rolling past the square.
     A battery of the North's intercontinental ballistic missiles was the highlight of the weapons display, although they are not known to have been successfully tested.
     Impoverished North Korea and rich, democratic South Korea remain technically at war after their 1950-53 conflict ended in a truce, not a treaty. The North, slapped with U.N. and U.S. sanctions for its nuclear weapons and rocket programmes, often threatens to destroy the South, and its major ally the United States, in a sea of flames.
     In a letter delivered by Liu, the most senior Chinese official to visit Pyongyang since leader Kim came to power following his father's death in 2011, Xi said China attached vital importance to its relationship with North Korea, China's official Xinhua news agency said.
China is North Korea's chief ally and its main trading partner, although ties have been strained over the North's nuclear programme.
     Xi said in the letter that China had "been striving to treat the bilateral relations from a strategic and long-term perspective". Liu reiterated China's position that it wanted an early resumption of the six-party talks.
     "The Chinese side is willing to seek closer communication and deepen cooperation, pushing for a long-term, healthy and stable development of the Sino-DPRK ties," Xi said in the letter cited by Xinhua, referring to North Korea by its official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
     Kim, who is in his early thirties, told the visiting Chinese delegation on Friday that North Korea was also keen to bolster ties, the North's official KCNA news agency said on Saturday.
     Liu is the fifth-ranked member on China's ruling Communist Party's elite Politburo Standing Committee.

South Korea officials cross into North ahead of family reunion

The advance teams from South Korea include 14 Red Cross officials and 11 maintenance worker tasked with putting the finishing touches on preparations for the meeting. 

SEOUL: South Korea sent advance teams into North Korea on Thursday (Oct 15) ahead of next week's rare reunion for families separated by the Korean War - a hugely emotional event that walks an unsteady diplomatic tightrope.
The Oct 20 to 26 reunion in North Korea's Mount Kumgang resort is only the second in five years and, ever since it was agreed in August, has been dogged by concerns that Pyongyang might find cause to cancel.
The advance teams included 14 Red Cross officials and 11 maintenance workers who were tasked with putting the finishing touches on preparations for the meeting, Seoul's Unification Ministry said.
"Some of them will stay in the venue until the beginning of the reunion to coordinate logistical matters for the event and other details," a ministry spokeswoman told AFP.
Next week's event is the result of an agreement the two Koreas reached in August to de-escalate tensions that had pushed them to the brink of armed conflict.
Pyongyang has threatened to cancel the reunion several times since then, taking issue with Seoul's criticism of its nuclear weapons programme and human rights record. Millions of people were separated during the 1950-53 Korean conflict that sealed the division between the two countries.
Most died without having a chance to see or hear from their families on the other side of the border, across which all civilian communication is banned. About 66,000 South Koreans - many of them in their 80s and 90s - are on the waiting list for an eventual reunion, but only a very limited number can be chosen each time.
The upcoming reunion will allow about 100 people from each side to meet their relatives, and the oldest participants are two 98-year-old South Korean men who have daughter and a son each in the North.
The Mount Kumgang resort - developed by South Korea's giant Hyundai Group - was once a symbol of inter-Korea reconciliation, hosting thousands of South Korean tourists allowed to travel under the "Sunshine Policy" of engagement pioneered by then president Kim Dae-Jung in the late 1990s.
Seoul halted the tours in 2008 after a South Korean tourist was shot and killed after straying into a military area.