(LEAD) Main opposition protests N.K. official's planned visit to South
(ATTN: UPDATES with ruling party's reaction in last 3 paras)
SEOUL, Feb. 22 (Yonhap) -- The main opposition Liberty Korea Party (LKP) strongly protested a planned visit to South Korea by a senior North Korean official accused of masterminding the communist regime's two deadly attacks on the South in 2010, which claimed the lives of a total of 50 people.
The government announced earlier that Kim Yong-chol, a vice chairman of the Central Committee of North Korea's ruling Workers' Party, will make a three-day visit to South Korea as the head of an eight-member high-level delegation to the closing ceremony of the PyeongChang Winter Olympics.
Kim, a former top military official who headed North Korea's reconnaissance bureau, is suspected of having orchestrated Pyongyang's two deadly attacks on the western coast in 2010 -- the sinking of the Cheonan warship and the shelling of Yeonpyeong Island.
Forty-six sailors were killed in the Cheonan's sinking and two marines and two civilians were killed in the island shelling.
The South has accepted the North's offer and President Moon Jae-in will meet with the delegation, officials said.
The main opposition LKP strongly protested the planned visit.
"The main culprit of the Cheonan's sinking can never put his foot on the land of the Republic of Korea," Rep. Jun Hee-kyung, a spokesman of the main opposition LKP, said in a statement.
Jun accused the Moon administration of trying to curry favor with the North and said it is because of such an attitude that the North made such a "shameless" decision to have Kim lead a delegation to the closing ceremony of the Olympics.
She also said the planned visit is a "rare humiliation" for the South.
"The only reason that Kim Yong-chol, the main culprit of the Cheonan's sinking and other provocations against the South, should set his foot in the South should be to come clean on his crimes and kneel before" victims of the attacks and the South Korean people, Jun said.
"President Moon Jae-in should make a choice between having Kim Yong-chol kneel before our people and never allowing the main culprit of the Cheonan's sinking to set his foot even an inch on the land of the Republic of Korea," she said.
The ruling Democratic Party welcomed the planned visit.
"We expect this visit will contribute to easing tensions on the Korean Peninsula and moving inter-Korean relations forward," Rep. Kim Hyun, the party's spokesperson, said in a statement.
Kim said the party hopes the North's delegation will hold a meeting with the U.S. delegation led by President Donald Trump's daughter Ivanka Trump. The U.S. delegation is scheduled to make a three-day visit to the South starting Friday.
(END)
-
(Movie Review) 'Troll Factory' navigates blurred line between fake, real with anticlimactic finale
-
Police officer admits to leaking investigation report into late actor Lee Sun-kyun
-
'Parasyte: The Grey' adapts Japanese alien invasion manga to Korean setting
-
S. Korea, U.S. launch task force to block N. Korea's nuclear, missile programs
-
N. Korean leader sends condolences to Putin over Russian concert hall shooting
-
(Movie Review) 'Troll Factory' navigates blurred line between fake, real with anticlimactic finale
-
'Parasyte: The Grey' adapts Japanese alien invasion manga to Korean setting
-
Police officer admits to leaking investigation report into late actor Lee Sun-kyun
-
Congenital diseases of children born from mothers working at Samsung recognized as industrial accidents
-
N. Korean leader sends condolences to Putin over Russian concert hall shooting
-
Unification minister slams N. Korea's abduction, detention of S. Koreans as inhumane
-
Yellow dust advisories issued for parts of S. Korea
-
(LEAD) Seoul bus drivers go on general strike, cause morning rush hour delays
-
(LEAD) S. Korea, U.S. launch task force to block N. Korea's nuclear, missile programs
-
Major hospitals in emergency mode amid huge losses over doctors' walkout