Hints and tips:
...If held as planned in April, it would only be the third time the leaders of North and South Korea will have met. The public also appears to be backing the South Korea’s president efforts....
...February 2004: The South Korean president, Roh Moo-hyun, urges the US and its allies to offer concessions to persuade North Korea to abandon its atomic weapons programme ahead of a second round of six-party...
...North Korea tested a ballistic missile in April, and last month repeated a warning that it could execute rocket attacks on South Korea, Japan and the US, although experts believe it is not close to achieving...
...Lee Myung-bak, South Korean president, has riled the north by not pursuing the diplomatic overtures favoured by his predecessor, Roh Moo-hyun....
...President Roh Moo-hyun of South Korea, who crosses the demilitarised zone on Tuesday to meet Kim Jong-il, the reclusive North Korean leader, has announced lamely that he does not want to “pick a fight”...
...It sounded like the South Korean president was pressuring Mr Bush to make a promise to replace the 54 year-old armistice between the US and North Korea with a formal peace treaty....
...Many South Koreans, including politicians loyal to Roh Moo-hyun, the left-leaning president, argue that the hardline “axis of evil” approach adopted by George W....
...s new emphasis on human rights in its approach to North Korea. Less than two weeks later, Roh Moo-hyun, South Korea?s president, struck a very different note....
...Unlike the US and Japan, for instance, both China and South Korea believe closer ties with North Korea, rather than sanctions, are the best way to persuade Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear weapons programmes...
...Roh Moo-hyun, South Korea's president, recently restated his hostility not only to military measures but also to economic sanctions....
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