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Kim Jong Un’s sister to visit dematerialised zone separating two Koreas

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's sister will visit the demilitarised zone separating the North from the South on Wednesday to pay her condolences to former South Korean First Lady Lee Hee-ho

Wednesday, 12th June 2019

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's sister will visit the demilitarised zone separating the North from the South on Wednesday (June 12) to pay her condolences to former South Korean First Lady Lee Hee-ho, South Korea's Unification Ministry said.

North Korea said that the sister, Kim Yo Jong, will visit the border village of Panmunjom in the evening, according to the ministry. She is expected to meet South Korean officials.

Madam Lee Hee-ho, who died on Monday, was the widow of former South Korean President Kim Dae-jung, who became the first South Korean leader to meet North Korea's then-leader Kim Jong Il in 2000.

Kim Yo Jong’s visit comes a year after her brother and United States President Donald Trump agreed at the first US-North Korea summit in Singapore to work towards the denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula, easing fears of war.

Those talks have since stalled and inter-Korean engagement has dwindled.

Kim Dae-jung, president between 1998-2003, is known for championing the so-called “Sunshine policy” of engagement with North Korea. Last year’s detente between the two Koreas was seen as a revival of that policy.

Reclusive North Korea and the rich, democratic South are technically still at war because their 1950-53 conflict ended in a truce, not a peace treaty.

Last year saw a number of high-level meetings between South and North, including three summits between Kim Jong Un and South Korean President Moon Jae-in.

Kim Yo Jong visited South Korea for the Winter Olympics in February 2018 and also accompanied her brother on the summits.