Ex-South Korean president expresses willingness to visit North Korea (AP) Updated: 2005-12-20 14:08
Former South Korean President Kim Dae-jung would like to visit North Korea to
meet leader Kim Jong Il as soon as his health allows him to make the trip, his
aide said Tuesday.
The North's Kim has three times invited the ex-South Korean president, with
whom he held the first-ever inter-Korean summit in Pyongyang in 2000. Kim
accepted the latest invitation made in August, agreeing to visit at an
appropriate time, said Choi Kyung-hwan, an aide to the former South Korean
president.
"I will visit Pyongyang as soon as my health allows," Kim Dae-jung was quoted
as saying in the Monthly Joong-Ang magazine published Tuesday. "The positions of
both the South and the North have been settled for (my) visit to the North. ...
Health is the variable to set a date."
Choi confirmed the remarks. The visit would be in a private capacity, not as
an envoy of South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun, Kim told the magazine.
Kim Dae-jung said he wants to discuss with the North's leader such topics as
turning the six-nation talks on the North's program into a permanent security
forum in Northeast Asia.
Earlier this month, Roh proposed his predecessor visit the North, promising
full government support.
Kim Dae-jung held the historic 2000 summit under his trademark "sunshine"
policy of engaging its neighbor. The summit touched off an unprecedented level
of exchanges between the two sides and Kim Dae-jung won the Nobel Peace Prize
later that year.
During the summit, the North's leader promised to pay a return trip to Seoul,
but hasn't yet done so.
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