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S.Korea to send special envoys to China, Japan to explain outcome of DPRK visit

Source: Xinhua| 2018-09-07 15:54:47|Editor: ZX
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SEOUL, Sept. 7 (Xinhua) -- South Korean President Moon Jae-in decided Friday to send his top security officials to China and Japan to explain the outcome of Moon's special envoys' visit to the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) earlier this week.

Kim Eui-keum, a presidential Blue House spokesman, told a press briefing that Chung Eui-yong, Moon's top national security adviser who led the five-member special delegation to Pyongyang, will visit China on Saturday as Moon's special envoy to explain the outcome of the DPRK visit.

Suh Hoon, chief of the National Intelligence Service, the country's spy agency, will travel to Japan Monday as a presidential special envoy to brief Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on the outcome of the DPRK visit.

Chung and Suh visited Pyongyang Wednesday along with three other special delegates, delivering Moon's letter to DPRK top leader Kim Jong Un.

During the meeting with the special envoys, Kim reconfirmed his firm commitment to the complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula, expressing his hope to realize the denuclearization and improve DPRK-U.S. relations within U.S. President Donald Trump's tenure.

The Blue House spokesman said the Moon government planned to submit a bill to ratify the Panmunjom Declaration, which the current leaders of the two Koreas signed after their first summit in April, to the National Assembly after approving it at the cabinet meeting on Tuesday.

The estimated costs to implement the declaration will be submitted together next week, the spokesman said.

Under the declaration, the two Koreas agreed to completely denuclearize the peninsula, stop all hostile acts toward each other and increase inter-Korean exchange and cooperation.

President Moon asked the unicameral parliament to ratify the declaration to push for the inter-Korean cooperation regardless of political situations in South Korea.

Moon and Kim agreed to hold their third summit in Pyongyang from Sept. 18-20. It would become the third trip by a South Korean president to the DPRK's capital city.

The first and second inter-Korean summits were both held in Pyongyang, in 2000 and 2007 respectively.

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