N.Korea rejects South’s economic aid plan
The influential sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has made insult-laden threats against South Korea. Photo: AAP
The powerful sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has insisted her country will never agree to a proposal from Seoul to boost the North’s economy in exchange for giving up nuclear weapons.
Kim Yo-jong’s comments mark the first time a senior North Korean official has commented directly on an “audacious plan” first proposed by South Korea’s President Yoon Suk-yeol in May.
They came after Yoon on Wednesday repeated at a news conference to mark his first 100 days that he was willing to provide phased economic aid to North Korea if it ended nuclear weapons development and began denuclearisation.
“To think that the plan to barter ‘economic co-operation’ for our honour, nukes, is the great dream, hope and plan of Yoon, we came to realise that he is really simple and still childish,” Kim Yo-jong said in a statement released by the state KCNA news agency.
“No one barters its destiny for corn cake.”
“Though he may knock at the door with (another) large plan in the future as his ‘bold plan’ does not work, we make it clear that we will not sit face to face with him,” she said.
Experts say the South’s latest economic plan is similar to proposals by previous presidents, including those during the summits between the then-US president Donald Trump and Kim Jong-un.
“Yoon’s initiative adds to a long list of failed offers involving South Korean promises to provide economic benefits to North Korea,” Scott Snyder, a senior fellow at the US Council on Foreign Relations think tank, said in a blog post on Thursday.
“These were the same assumptions that were behind a succession of failed efforts to jump-start denuclearisation talks.
“The acuteness of North Korea’s economic vulnerability will make the leadership all the more resistant toward South Korean-proposed infrastructure projects.”
North Korea – having last week declared ‘victory’ over COVID-19 – fired two cruise missiles into the sea on Wednesday, the first such test in two months.
– AAP