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South Korean President Moon Jae-in meets with the leaders of five major political parties at the Blue House on July 18. From the left are Justice Party leader Sim Sang-jung, Bareunmirae Party leader Sohn Hak-kyu, Liberty Korea Party leader Hwang Kyo-ahn, President Moon Jae-in, Democratic Party leader Lee Hae-chan, and Party for Democracy and Peace leader Chung Dong-yong. (Kim Jung-hyo, staff photographer)
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Agree to establish “emergency cooperation body” on national level
South Korean President Moon Jae-in and the leaders of five political parties declared Japan’s export control measures to be “unjust economic retaliation” and pledged cooperation across party lines in a July 18 meeting at the Blue House. In a joint statement adopted after the meeting that day, Moon and the five party leaders said, “We urge the Japanese government to immediately withdraw its economic retaliation measures and, as additional measures such as [South Korea’s] removal from [Japan’s] white list would damage South Korea-Japan relations and security cooperation in Northeast Asia, we urge it to pursue a diplomatic resolution.” They also agreed to set up an emergency cooperation body to respond at the pan-national level, but did not reach an agreement on other issues such as passage of the supplementary budget. Following the invitational dialogue with party leaders at the Blue House at 4 pm that day, spokespeople for Moon and the five party leaders individually announced that the participants had held in-depth discussions to share their positions on Japan’s export control measures and agreed on four main points. The meeting lasted for three hours, extending significantly longer than the initially scheduled two. In their joint statement, Moon and the five party leaders urged the Japanese government to withdraw its economic retaliation measures and abandon plans to remove South Korea from its white list. “The administration and the ruling and opposition parties share the view that Japan’s export control measures constitute unjust economic retaliation in violation of the free trade order and are measures that serious damage the amicable, mutually beneficial relationship between South Korea and Japan,” the statement said. It also said, “The administration and the ruling and opposition parties will work together to strengthen the fundamentals of the national economy and the competitiveness of the materials, components, and equipment industries.” “We will also be establishing and operating an emergency cooperation body for a response at the pan-national level,” it continued.
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South Korean President Moon Jae-in meets with the leaders of South Korea’s five major political parties at the Blue House on July 18. (Kim Jung-hyo, staff photographer)
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