产品展示
  • 适用于大众探歌改装专用内饰配件  探歌后备箱储物盒备胎收纳盒
  • 创意车载手机支架汽车仪表台旋转式支撑架多功能车用HUD底座导航
  • 汽车高音喇叭高音仔外置改装车载小高音头音响12V24V无损通用一对
  • 风帆蓄电池80D26适用索纳塔马自达6凯美瑞纳7 68ah汽车电瓶
  • 汽车音响中音喇叭3.5寸3寸环绕纯中音改装三分频喇叭频仪表台喇叭
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

汽车配件

Pyongyang says it is willing to discuss improvement in relations if Seoul drops hostility

2024-05-20 22:14:52      点击:042
Kim Yo-jong,<strong></strong> the sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un / Yonhap
Kim Yo-jong, the sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un / Yonhap

The sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un said Friday that President Moon Jae-in's proposal to declare a formal end to the Korean War is an "admirable idea" and Pyongyang is willing to discuss improving inter-Korean relations if Seoul ceases to be hostile toward it.

Kim Yo-jong stressed, however, that the right conditions should be created first before an end-of-war declaration is adopted, such as the removal of what she called "inveterate hostile policy and unequal double standards" toward the North.

Her statement came just hours after a vice foreign minister of the North dismissed Moon's end-of-war declaration proposal as "something premature," saying such a declaration would end up as nothing more than a scrap of paper as long as the U.S. hostile policy remains unchanged.

While the earlier statement from Vice Foreign Minister Ri Thae-song appeared to be geared toward the United States, the statement from the North Korean leader's sister was seen as targeted more toward South Korea.

"The declaration of the termination of the war is an interesting and an admirable idea. ... But it is necessary to look into whether it is the right time now and whether there are conditions ripe for discussing this issue," Kim said in a statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency.

"Now double-dealing standards, prejudice and hostile policies toward the DPRK and speeches and acts antagonizing us persist. Under such situation it does not make any sense to declare the end of the war with all the things, which may become a seed of a war between parties that had been at odds for more than half a century, left intact," she added.

DPRK stands for the North's official name, Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

'Not yet': North Korea opposed to formally ending Korean War 'Not yet': North Korea opposed to formally ending Korean War 2021-09-24 08:40  |  North Korea
Kim said that such preconditions should be met first before both Koreas will be able to sit down face-to-face to have meaningful discussions on the matter.

Kim also said that North Korea is willing to discuss improvements in inter-Korean relations but that is also contingent upon whether South Korea stops applying double standards and hostile policy toward the North.

"We have willingness to keep our close contacts with the South again and have constructive discussion with it about the restoration and development of the bilateral relations if it is careful about its future language and not hostile toward us," she said.

Kim's statement came hours after North Korean Vice Foreign Minister Ri Thae-song rejected Moon's offer for an end-of-war declaration that he made during his speech at the U.N. session earlier this week, saying it would be meaningless as long as a "hostile policy" remains in place.

Inter-Korean relations have significantly chilled since North Korea blew up a liaison office in its border town of Kaesong and cut off all cross-border communication lines in June last year.

The communication lines were back online briefly in late July, but the North did not respond to Seoul's regular calls again in protest of summertime joint military drills by South Korea and the United States, which Pyongyang usually denounces as a rehearsal for invasion.

North Korea has recently heightened tensions by test-firing a new type of long-range cruise missile, which was followed by ballistic missile launches.

The two Koreas are still technically at war, as the 1950-53 Korean War ended in a cease-fire, not a peace treaty. (Yonhap)



'Heardle' today: Correct answer and song hints for August 11
Remains of US soldier killed in Korean War identified