South Korea gifts China’s Xi a Go board made from prized wood, after crown for Trump
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Chinese President Xi Jinping (left) sat down for his first summit with South Korean President Lee Jae Myung on the last day of the Apec forum.
PHOTO: AFP
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GYEONGJU, South Korea - South Korea's new president presented Chinese leader Xi Jinping with "the finest" wooden board for ancient strategy game Go during a state visit on Nov 1, days after he gave US President Donald Trump a gold crown at a summit meeting.
Gifts for visiting leaders are a key part of international diplomacy, but fraught with difficulties, particularly when such fresh comparisons can be made between offerings to the world's two most powerful people - who are also fierce rivals.
Mr Xi sat down for his first summit with recently-elected Lee Jae Myung
Mr Lee has vowed to improve ties with China
The Go board was made from the prized wood of Torreya nucifera, a tree native to South Korea's Jeju Island, Mr Lee's office said.
Both leaders enjoy playing the game and when Mr Xi last visited South Korea 11 years ago, he was given Go playing stones, it said to explain the thinking behind the gift.
Some mass-market Go boards made from the same wood are for sale online for nearly 5 million won (S$4,500).
Mr Lee also gave Mr Xi a traditional Korean mother-of-pearl inlay lacquered tray to symbolise hopes for continued friendly South Korea-China relations, Mr Lee's office said.
A state dinner after the summit will include dumplings enjoyed in both countries, as well as a South Korean dish of sweet-and-spicy fried chicken popular among Chinese visitors, and abalone with Mala sauce, a Sichuan sauce popular among South Koreans.
Mr Xi's favoured high-end Chinese liquor Mengzhilan baijiu will also be served, Mr Lee's office said.
Mr Lee met Mr Trump earlier this week
In recognition of Mr Trump's role as a "peacemaker" on the Korean peninsula, he was awarded the "Grand Order of Mugunghwa"
Mr Trump was also given a replica crown featuring towering gold prongs and dangling leaf shapes. The original was found in a tomb in Gyeongju, capital of the ancient Silla kingdom, which ruled about a third of the Korean peninsula until the 9th century. REUTERS

