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18 November 2009 

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Obama Winds Up Asia Tour With South Korea Summit


18 November 2009

U.S. President Barack Obama has arrived in South Korea, where he is expected to show solidarity with the country's president in demanding North Korea move toward ending its nuclear weapons programs.

President Barack Obama (L)walks with S. Korean Foreign Minister Yu Myung-hwan(R)after arriving at US military airbase in Osan, 18 Nov 2009
President Barack Obama (L)walks with S. Korean Foreign Minister Yu Myung-hwan(R)after arriving at US military airbase in Osan, 18 Nov 2009
The president landed at a U.S. air base Wednesday evening, and is to hold talks with South Korean President Lee Myung-bak Thursday here in the South Korean capital.

South Korea and the United States are trying to coax the North back to six-nation talks aimed at ending its nuclear weapons. President Obama has indicated he will send an envoy to Pyongyang before the end of the year for one-on-one discussions, but only in the context of restarting the multinational process.

Apart from the nuclear issue, Mr. Obama's visit is seen as fairly routine. Scott Snyder is the director of the Center for U.S. Korea Policy.

"Frankly, the relationship is in pretty good health right now, so there aren't necessarily any real burning issues," Snyder said. "They'll coordinate on North Korea, they'll talk about other issues in the alliance. President Obama will thank South Korea for its contributions to Afghanistan."

The run-up to President Obama's arrival here in Seoul has been relatively free of protests.

However, a group of North Korean human rights advocates called on Mr. Obama Wednesday to speak out more forcefully against the North's abuses. Tim Peters, a leader of the demonstration, says Mr. Obama has spoken too softly on North Korean human rights while focusing on security and economic matters.

"Mr. President, your voice is desperately needed!" Peters said.

Human rights activists want more U.S. pressure on China to stop sending North Korean refugees home against their will, where they may face severe punishment or execution.


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