Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Clinton to visit S.Korea, Japan, Cambodia

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (left)

06-12-2012
AFP

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will visit South Korea as part of an Asian trip next month to discuss North Korea and visit an international exhibition, according to a news report.

Around July 4 Clinton will visit the US Pavilion at the Yeosu Expo now underway in the southeastern coastal city, South Korea's Yonhap news agency said, quoting diplomatic sources in Washington.

A South Korean foreign ministry spokesman said he had no information.

She will also hold talks with South Korean officials in Seoul focusing on North Korea's nuclear programme and the situation on the Korean peninsula, Yonhap said.

Clinton's last visit to South Korea was in November last year when she took part in an international aid conference in the southern coastal city of Busan.

Her Asian swing will also take her to Japan and Cambodia, the news agency said.


Clinton said Monday she would visit Tokyo on July 8 to take part in a conference aimed at ensuring social progress in Afghanistan after foreign troops leave.

She will also take part in the Asian Regional Forum in Cambodia, scheduled for July 12-13, Yonhap said, adding the forum could offer the chance of a meeting with North Korea's Foreign Minister Pak Ui-Chun.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

the issue with with some oppositon people is that they were from affluent families who escaped the KR taking over power in the the 1970s, thus, they themselves often blinded by their affluent family background and cannot bring themselves to work cooperative with other cambodians in cambodia. that's the reall problem, it's more like being prejudice, biased and discriminatory based on one's background, status, affluence, etc... that's the real issue with the opposition still clinging on to their bygone past. and cambodia did have an upheaval and tragedy that changed cambodia, so people like the opposition need to reform themselves so they will not be blinded by their personal pride and prejudice, i think. cambodia has changed, so should these people who came from affluent families of the bygone era, really. after what happened in cambodia, i think people want to go that direction again, really.