South Korea tells China it wants to normalise ties, upgrade economic relations
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South Korea and China also agreed to work towards substantive progress on economic and supply chain cooperation.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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SEOUL - South Korea hopes to normalise relations with China that have been strained in recent years, a special envoy from Seoul told Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi on Aug 24, and agreed to boost economic cooperation, said Seoul’s Foreign Ministry.
South Korean President Lee Jae Myung sent a special delegation led by former Parliament Speaker Park Byeong-seug to his country’s main trading partner as he travels to Washington to meet US President Donald Trump.
Mr Lee arrived in Washington early on Aug 25.
Mr Park told Mr Wang that he hoped the countries would work together to “open the door to normalising South Korea-China relations, which have been strained in recent years”, according to his comments relayed by South Korean TV.
Mr Park handed Mr Wang a letter from Mr Lee to Chinese President Xi Jinping and invited him to the summit of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation grouping in October, said South Korea’s Foreign Ministry in a statement on Aug 25.
Mr Wang welcomed the delegation’s visit and appreciated the message of developing ties between the countries, the ministry said.
“(South Korea’s) new government will pursue a mature development of South Korea-China strategic cooperation partnership based on national interest while continuing to develop the South Korea-US alliance,” Mr Park said.
The two sides agreed to work towards substantive progress on economic and supply chain cooperation, the ministry said.
In a readout from the Chinese Foreign Ministry, Mr Wang said that development of both countries’ ties has shown that good neighbourliness, seeking common ground while reserving differences and expanding cooperation are the “right choices”.
Mr Wang added that China’s policy is to maintain stability and continuity with South Korea, and he urged both sides to “improve national sentiment and manage sensitivities properly” to move bilateral relations forward steadily.
Diplomatic ties between the countries have improved since a 2017 dispute over South Korea’s deployment of a US missile defence system, which Beijing opposed. But they exchanged harsh words in 2023 over critical comments on Beijing by South Korea’s former president Yoon Suk Yeol. REUTERS

