North Korean leader Kim Jong-il visited a model high-income farm yesterday after dining on Peking duck and hearing China's communist leaders exhort him to heed the winds of capitalism and to soften his nuclear ambitions.
The reclusive leader of the Stalinist North later rolled out of Beijing by train, ending a visit carried out under the utmost secrecy in which he met Chinese President and Communist Party chief Hu Jintao (
Talks were dominated by requests from leaders of the world's fastest growing major economy to pay attention to the need for economic reform and to soften his stand towards the US over his ambitions to possess nuclear weapons, South Korean media said.
Security guarantees
In meetings with his counterpart, military chief Jiang, and parliament leader Wu Bangguo (
His rare overseas trip comes a week after US Vice President Dick Cheney visited China with new evidence of the North's possession of nuclear arms and warning that time was running out to end the stalemate.
Chinese officials and North Korean media have been silent on the visit.
But after about an hour-and-a-half in Hancunhe village, Kim boarded his train bound for Pyongyang, South Korea's Yonhap news agency said.
Security was tight at the model farm village of Hancunhe in suburban Beijing that is home to an exhibition on Jiang's privatization theories.
After it was designated a model region in 1978, the village pursued rapid modernization to raise the living standards of farmers and annual per capita income has reached 7,600 yuan (US$918), Yonhap said in a report on Kim's visit.
The trip underscored Kim's emphasis on modernizing farming in his isolated and impoverished state, where peasants have suffered famine several times since the mid-1990s and recent market reforms are only starting to show results, analysts say.
Kim joined Jiang for a lunch of Peking duck on Tuesday at the famed Quanjude restaurant near Tiananmen Square, Yonhap said.
Discussions on the North's economy figured prominently and Kim reportedly asked China's leaders for help with reforms and for aid, South Korean media said.
Kim may stop in the northeastern rustbelt city of Shenyang on his way home to discuss economic development and cooperation, South Korea's Chosun Ilbo newspaper said.
"It's known that Kim expressed a strong interest in reforming the North Korean economy," the Chosun Ilbo said, quoting unidentified sources as saying China would give active support.
Premier Wen, who directs the booming China economy, suggested Kim visit South Korea and "directly witness the winds of capitalism," the South's Munhwa Ilbo newspaper said.
Nuclear crisis
Ending the nuclear crisis is critical to unlocking outside aid to the North Korean economy, including from China, the North's closest friend and host of two rounds of inconclusive six-party talks aimed at breaking the nuclear impasse.
However, Kim may calculate that an arsenal of nuclear weapons is the only way to guarantee the survival of his government, giving him leverage with the US as he presses for security guarantees to prevent any possible US invasion.
Kim voiced doubts in a meeting with Jiang about whether he would win the security guarantees he wants in return for stopping his nuclear weapons programs, the Munhwa Ilbo said.
Jiang told him the possibility of a US invasion was slim and suggested Kim change his tough line, it said.
Kim voiced Pyongyang's willingness to settle the nuclear crisis at the next round of six-party talks.
KINGPIN: Marset allegedly laundered the proceeds of his drug enterprise by purchasing and sponsoring professional soccer teams and even put himself in the starting lineups Notorious Latin American narco trafficker Sebastian Marset, who eluded police for years, was handed over to US authorities after his arrest on Friday in Bolivia. Marset, a Uruguayan national who was on the US most-wanted list, was passed to agents of the US Drug Enforcement Administration at Santa Cruz airport in Bolivia, then put on a US airplane, Bolivian state television showed. “The arrest and deportation were carried out pursuant to a court order issued by the US justice system,” Bolivian Minister of Government Marco Antonio Oviedo told reporters. The alleged kingpin was arrested in an upscale neighborhood of Santa
FAKE NEWS? ‘When the government demands the press become a state mouthpiece under the threat of punishment, something has gone very wrong,’ a civic group said The top US broadcast regulator on Saturday threatened media outlets over negative coverage of the Middle East war, after US President Donald Trump slammed critical headlines from the “Fake News Media.” The US president since his first term has derided mainstream media as “fake news” and has sued major outlets over what he sees as unfair coverage. Brendan Carr, head of the US Federal Communications Commission — which oversees the nation’s radio, television and Internet media — said broadcasters risked losing their licenses over news coverage. “The law is clear. Broadcasters must operate in the public interest, and they will
SCANDAL: Other images discovered earlier show Andrew bent over a female and lying across the laps of a number of women, while Mandelson is pictured in his underpants A photograph of former British prince Andrew and veteran politician Peter Mandelson sitting in bathrobes alongside late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein was unearthed on Friday in previously published documents. The image is believed to be the first known photograph of the two men with Epstein. They are currently engulfed in scandal in the UK over their ties to their mutual friend. The undated photograph, first reported by ITV News, shows King Charles III’s disgraced brother and former British ambassador to the US sitting barefoot outside on a wooden deck. They appear to have mugs with a US flag on them
INFLUTENTIAL THEORIST: Habermas was particularly critical of the ‘limited interest’ shown by German politicians in ‘shaping a politically effective Europe Jurgen Habermas, whose work on communication, rationality and sociology made him one of the world’s most influential philosophers and a key intellectual figure in his native Germany, has died. He was 96. Habermas’ publisher, Suhrkamp, said he died on Saturday in Starnberg, near Munich. Habermas frequently weighed in on political matters over several decades. His extensive writing crossed the boundaries of academic and philosophical disciplines, providing a vision of modern society and social interaction. His best-known works included the two-volume Theory of Communicative Action. Habermas, who was 15 at the time of Nazi Germany’s defeat, later recalled the dawn of