Park calls for North Korea and Tokyo to amend their ways
North Korea must end provocations and Japan atone for colonial past, says S. Korean president
Addressing her two biggest foreign policy challenges, South Korea's new president, Park Geun-hye, urged Japan yesterday to acknowledge its aggressive past while calling on North Korea to peacefully engage with the South and abandon its pursuit of nuclear weapons.
"While provocations by the North will be met by stronger responses, the North's willingness to make the right choice and walk the path of change will be answered with more flexible engagement," Park said in her first national speech after her inauguration on Monday.
"I urge the North to hasten efforts to normalise inter-Korean relations and open an era of happiness on the Korean Peninsula together with us."
The tradition of a South Korean president addressing the nation to mark the March 1, 1919, Korean uprising against Japan's colonisation of the peninsula in the early 20th century gave Park a chance to express her thoughts on North Korea and Japan.
Seoul's testy relations with North Korea have grown much more antagonistic in recent months as North Korea has tested both a long-range rocket and a nuclear device.
And it has threatened to test more if Washington and its allies push for more sanctions against the highly militarised country, complicating Park's agenda even before she started a five-year term as South Korea's first female president.
During her election campaign, Park suggested that she would end prolonged inter-Korean tensions that prevailed under her predecessor, Lee Myung-bak, whose hardline policy saw two nuclear tests and three long-range rocket tests by North Korea, as well as two military attacks blamed on the North that killed 50 South Koreans in 2010.