N.Korea leader's sister demands South drop 'hostile policies': KCNA
PYONGYANG, SEPT 24: The influential sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un on Friday said it was "admirable" of the South to propose a formal end to the Korean War but demanded Seoul first drop its "hostile policies" towards Pyongyang.
Kim Yo Jong's remarks, carried by
Pyongyang's official KCNA news agency, were in response to South Korean
President Moon Jae-in's recent calls for declaring an official end to the
1950-53 conflict that ended in a truce, not a peace treaty, leaving the two
sides technically at war for more than half a century.
In a speech at the UN General
Assembly earlier this week, Moon proposed the declaration of an end to the
conflict that broke out 71 years ago, stressing such an act would "make
irreversible progress in denuclearisation and usher in an era of complete
peace".
Kim, a key policy adviser to her
brother Kim Jong Un, said it was an "admirable idea" to propose a
formal end to the war but insisted the South should remove its hostile attitude
first.
Making such a declaration with
"double-dealing standards, prejudice and hostile policies" still in
place "does not make any sense," she said.
"For the termination of the
war to be declared, respect for each other should be maintained and prejudiced
viewpoint, inveterate hostile policy and unequal double standards must be removed
first," she said.
She added making such a
declaration would "hold no water and would change nothing" under
current conditions.
But the North would be willing to
have talks on improving ties with Seoul if the South withdrew hostility
"after breaking with the past when it often provoked us".
Kim Yo Jong last week accused
Moon of "slander" after both Koreas carried out missile launches.
North Korea carried out two
missile firings this month alone, one involving a long-range cruise missile and
the other short-range ballistic missiles.
Moon described Pyongyang's recent
launches as "provocations" when he oversaw a successful test-firing
of a submarine launched ballistic missile (SLBM) last week, making the South
one of a handful of nations with the advanced technology.
That prompted Kim Yo Jong to
condemn Seoul's "illogical attitude that describes their similar behaviour
as a legitimate action to support peace, and ours as a threat to peace".
Communications between the North and South have largely been cut in the aftermarth of a second US-North summit in Hanoi that collapsed in February 2019 as then-president Donald Trump and Kim Jung Un couldn't agree on the terms of an agreement.
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