How does China view upcoming inter-Korean summit?

Arirang News 2018-04-25

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Let's continue our pre-inter Korean summit coverage with part three of our special reports on the varying perspectives from the major players in the region.
Today..... we are going to focus in on China,... Pyongyang's long-time ally,... to get a clearer idea about what Beijing's expectations are.
Shin Se-min reports. North Korea and China have a long history together.
They share a border, and have long been business partners.
Beijing has supported North Korea even when the rest of the international community had turned its back on Pyongyang.
However, their close relationship had appeared to weaken,... as Beijing joined hands with the international community to squeeze Pyongyang with economic and diplomatic sanctions.
But then, a dramatic shift in tone.

“The North Korean leader’s first foreign trip since taking power, was here,… to Beijing, meeting with China’s Xi Jinping. During their encounter, Kim reportedly said he was “committed to denuclearization” and agreed to resume the long-stalled six-party talks,… last held some decade ago. And watchers here say the diplomatic thaw could bring about genuinely positive results.”

One of those results is an expanded role for Beijing.

"The North Korean leader's surprise trip patched things up with China. We know that Kim had briefed the Chinese President of his plan and that gesture earned the North Korean regime the full support of China when dealing with other countries."

"With better relations between the two sides, China will be able to play a bigger role in helping and guiding North Korea to the path of ultimate denuclearization. What China wants is to avoid a war in the region,... something both South and North Korea want,... as much as the international community."

And as to what needs to be done to keep up this improved sentiment in the region,... and eventually lead to the ultimate goal of denuclearizing the Korean Peninsula, some experts say that neighboring countries should play a bigger role.

"Both China and South Korea should proactively handle the situation. In order to make sure North Korea doesn't revert back to its reclusive regime, countries in the region should also prove to the North their willingness to make this work. And South Korea reducing its joint military drills with the U.S. can be seen as one way of doing this."

There seems to be a more amicable atmosphere in the region in the final build up to the summit between North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and South Korean President Moon Jae-in.
The North's Kim Jong-un made an unprecedented, humanitarian move this week,... visiting the Chinese tourists who were injured in a traffic accident in North Korea, while also sending "deep condolences" to those bereaved.
And the challenge for now,... at least,... is keeping the momentum going,... toward the end goal of lasting peace on a nuclear-free Korean Peninsula.
Shin Se-min, Arirang News.

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