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China's Xi will visit North Korea to push for deeper ties

China announced on Friday that President Xi Jinping will visit North 'Korea for a two-day tour starting June '8. This is his first trip in almost seven years. Beijing wants to reassert ties Pyongyang as its only formal treaty ally.

Beijing is trying to bring Pyongyang into its fold again after the COVID-19 virus pandemic frozen exchanges. Kim Jong Un has also deepened relations with Moscow, sending troops and arms to support Russia's invasion in Ukraine.

John Delury is a senior fellow at the Asia Society. He said, "The implicit message from the Chinese side... is that we are still the main actor when it comes North Korea." "Russia is one of the audiences."

The announcement made by the Chinese Communist Party's international department on Friday follows Xi’s summits with Donald Trump, the U.S. president and Vladimir Putin, the Russian president in Beijing last'month.

KCNA, the state news agency, reported that Xi was visiting North Korea on Kim's invitation.

An official of the Blue House, the president's presidential office, said that South Korea views the trip as a high-level bilateral meeting unaligned with Moscow.

The official stated that "we do not see this as a coordinated action by the three countries. Neither are we certain how it could be related to the U.S. China summit."

Seoul expects Beijing will continue to play a 'constructive role in peninsula issues', the Blue House said separately.

Kim was invited to a large military parade held in Beijing, China last September. He arrived on his green armored train.

After a six-year hiatus caused by the pandemic in 2009, passenger train services resumed between the two capitals in March. Air China then restarted flights.

Chinese tourists are still not allowed to book, but some business travellers and students on exchange have.

First Overseas Trip This Year

Xi will make his first overseas trip this year when he visits Pyongyang. The 72-year old, who travels abroad less often, was last seen in South Korea at the end of October, where he met Trump.

Delury said that Xi should keep a close eye on the situation in Pyongyang. He said Xi's visit to both Koreas would be a 'big?win' for the peninsula.

He added that "the Chinese are fond of maintaining a certain symmetry" between the two Koreas.

Trump has said that he is open to another meeting with Kim, the North Korean leader, after having met him three times during his first term.

Since Xi was appointed China's leader in 2012 he has visited North Korea twice and its southern neighbor once. In 2008, he visited Pyongyang as vice president and met the then-leader Kim Jong Il. He is the father of?the current leader.

Kim, who visited a factory to make nuclear material this week, called for a "significant" expansion of Pyongyang’s atomic arsenal.

Experts believe that Kim's visit to the site is linked to his upcoming meeting with Xi. Kim had inspected the plans of a new intercontinental missile called "Hwasong-20" before his visit to Beijing in September. Reporting by Xiuhao chen and Liz Lee, in Beijing; Jack Kim, Kyu -seok Shim, and Brenda Goh, in Seoul. Editing by Himani sarkar, Kate Mayberry, and Clarence Fernandez.

(source: Reuters)