South Korean President Lee Jae-myung and Chinese President Xi Jinping shake hands over documents on economy and Korean Peninsula peace during state visit talks.
South Korean President Lee Jae-myung and Chinese President Xi Jinping shake hands over documents on economy and Korean Peninsula peace during state visit talks.
Image générée par IA

Lee Jae-myung to discuss economy, North Korea with Xi

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President Lee Jae-myung plans to discuss practical economic cooperation and Korean Peninsula peace efforts with Chinese President Xi Jinping during his state visit next week. National Security Adviser Wi Sung-lac said Friday that the talks aim to build momentum for resuming dialogue with North Korea.

President Lee Jae-myung's state visit to China is scheduled for three days: arrival in Beijing on Sunday, summit with President Xi Jinping on Monday, and travel to Shanghai on Tuesday. In Shanghai, he will visit the historic site that served as the Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea during Japan's colonial rule.

National Security Adviser Wi Sung-lac told reporters that the leaders will discuss practical cooperation in areas such as supply-chain investments, the digital economy, environment and climate change, people-to-people exchanges, tourism, and responses to transnational crimes. North Korea will be a key agenda item as Seoul seeks to leverage the visit to resume dialogue with Pyongyang.

Wi said, "President Lee will ask China to play a 'constructive' role in creating 'a breakthrough in resolving issues on the Korean Peninsula.'" On Taiwan issues, he added, "We respect the one-China policy and act in accordance with that position."

The visit comes amid heightened tensions in the Taiwan Strait following Beijing's large-scale military drills near the self-ruled island earlier this week. A photo from their previous summit in Gyeongju on November 1, 2025, underscores the ongoing efforts to strengthen bilateral ties.

Ce que les gens disent

Reactions on X to Lee Jae-myung's upcoming summit with Xi Jinping center on economic cooperation, supply chain stability, and efforts to resume North Korea dialogue. News accounts report neutral anticipation for strengthened ties amid Japan-Taiwan tensions. Skeptical Korean users criticize potential concessions on the one-China principle and demand action on Chinese illegal structures in the West Sea. Some highlight strategic opportunities in critical minerals while expressing caution over U.S. alliance implications.

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President Lee Jae Myung has departed for a four-day state visit to China for summit talks with President Xi Jinping, focusing on North Korea, economic ties, and cultural exchanges. This marks his first trip to China since taking office last June and the first by a South Korean president since 2019.

South Korean President Lee Jae-myung met Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing on January 5, the second day of his four-day state visit—the first by a sitting SK leader since 2019. Amid prior announcements of economic talks, discussions emphasized Korean peninsula denuclearisation, regional peace, and bilateral normalisation, with Seoul urging Beijing's constructive role.

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In a summit in Beijing, South Korean President Lee Jae Myung and Chinese President Xi Jinping agreed to explore measures for resuming dialogue with North Korea. The leaders emphasized peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula while discussing expanded economic and cultural cooperation. Despite North Korea's recent missile launches, they reaffirmed their commitment to collaboration.

Wrapping up his state visit to China (previewed in our departure coverage), President Lee Jae-myung met Xi Jinping to seek North Korea mediation, toured independence sites in Shanghai, and posted a playful Pororo penguin message urging inter-Korean reconciliation upon return.

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La Corée du Sud se prépare à accueillir le sommet de la Coopération économique pour l'Asie-Pacifique (APEC) au milieu de visites simultanées du président américain Donald Trump et du président chinois Xi Jinping. Les sommets aborderont les négociations commerciales, le problème nucléaire nord-coréen et les structures chinoises en mer de l'Ouest. Le président Lee Jae Myung vise à renforcer l'alliance Corée-États-Unis et à normaliser les relations Corée-Chine à travers ces réunions.

Former President Moon Jae-in has said U.S. President Donald Trump's planned visit to China could provide fresh momentum for peace on the Korean Peninsula. In a keynote speech at a U.S. think tank in Los Angeles, he called on Washington and Pyongyang to resume stalled talks.

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In a CCTV interview ahead of his state visit to China, South Korean President Lee Jae-myung reaffirmed adherence to the one-China principle and 1992 diplomatic guidelines, stressing peace in Northeast Asia including the Taiwan Strait.

 

 

 

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