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President Moon Jae-in enters the banquet room of the Blue House to have lunch together with the leaders of South Korea’s five major political parties on Mar. 7. (Blue House Photo Pool)
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Political leaders from the National Assembly were briefed during a luncheon with the president
During a luncheon with the leaders of the five main ruling and opposition parties at the Blue House on Mar. 7, South Korean President Moon Jae-in gave a detailed explanation of how South and North Korea reached an agreement to hold a third inter-Korean summit at Panmunjeom at the end of April. The two sides had been holding closed-door meetings at Panmunjeom, and during a discussion about whether the summit should be held in Seoul, Pyongyang or Panmunjeom, North Korea chose Panmunjeom, Moon said. During the meeting, Liberty Korea Party leader Hong Joon-pyo asked a number of questions about the inter-Korean summit, including when the meetings with the North had begun, where they had been held and who made the proposal. “There were no secret meetings outside the country,” Moon said in response. “As for who made the proposal, if you go back to the Berlin Declaration [last year], you could say that we made the proposal, and if you think of the New Year’s address [by North Korean leader Kim Jong-un on Jan. 1], you could say that the North Koreans responded favorably. It happened naturally.” “[The meetings between South and North Korea] mostly took place in Panmunjeom. You also had the special envoy [Kim Yo-jong] and the high-ranking delegation from North Korea,” said Blue House National Security Advisor Chung Eui-yong, who was present at the luncheon. Moon explained that it was North Korea that chose Panmunjeom as the location for the summit: “As for the location, we said that Pyongyang, Seoul and Panmunjeom would all be fine. Since Panmunjeom includes sections under the jurisdiction of South and North Korea, we said anywhere in Panmunjeom would be fine and that we could also spend one day in our half and the next day in their half… We made a number of proposals along those lines, and it was North Korea that opted to hold the summit at the House of Peace [on the South Korean side of the Joint Security Area].” When Hong asked whether the summit had been scheduled for the end of April because of the local elections coming up on June 13, Moon said, “We expressed our viewpoint that, if the conditions permitted us to hold the summit at an early time, we wanted to create some distance from the local elections in June if at all possible. The upshot of a lot of back and forth between both sides was that the end of April was a good time. It doesn’t really make sense to insist on asking who was first and who wasn’t.”
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The inter-Korean summit in April will be held at the House of Peace on the South Korean side of the Joint Security Area in Panmunjeom. The venue is shown on Jan. 9 during senior level talks between South and North to discuss the logistics of North Korea’s participation at the Pyeongchang Olympics. (Photo Pool)
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