US to North Korea; Why is Donald Trump meeting Korean dictator,Kim Jong-un

US President Donald Trump and North Korea’s leader Kim Jong-un are meeting at the start of their high profile summit in Vietnam’s capital, Hanoi.

The pair shook hands for the media before heading to talks and dinner at the five-star Metropole hotel.

They are expected to discuss a roadmap for ridding the Korean peninsula of nuclear weapons in two days of talks.There has been little progress on that and other issues since the first Trump-Kim summit in Singapore last year.

Mr Trump said he thought this latest meeting would be “very successful”.

Earlier, he tweeted in praise of the host country on Wednesday morning, writing: “Vietnam is thriving like few places on earth. North Korea would be the same, and very quickly, if it would denuclearize.”

“The potential is AWESOME,” he added.

Their first encounter was scheduled to be a 20-minute one-on-one meeting. It will be followed by dinner with their aides, according to the White House.

The two leaders will attend a series of meetings together on Thursday, but their exact agenda is unknown. It’s expected that any major events – the signing of agreements or significant press conferences will take place a day after their meeting.

North Korean state media praised Mr Kim for making the 4,000km (2,485-mile) trip, with state paper Rodong Sinmun dedicating four out of its six pages to it.

It said North Koreans had reacted to his visit with “boundless excitement and emotion”, and urged people to work harder to “give him reports of victory when he returns”.

North Korea has been ruled since its creation in 1948 by three generations of the Kim family.The country has a woeful human rights record, and the UN says its people live under “systematic, widespread and gross human rights violations”.

Kim Jong-un carried out a brutal purge after taking charge of the country in 2011, ordering the death of his own uncle to secure his position.

About 140 senior military officers and government officials were executed between 2012 and 2016, according to South Korea’s Institute for National Security Strategy.

The economy is tightly controlled by the government, with widespread shortages of food, fuel and other basic necessities as the state funnels funds into the military and its nuclear weapons programme.

The Hanoi meeting is expected to build on the groundwork of what was achieved at the Singapore summit last June.That meeting produced a vaguely worded agreement, with both leaders agreeing to “work towards denuclearisation” – though it was never made clear what this would entail.

Little diplomatic progress was made following the summit. This time round, both leaders will be very conscious of the need to answer their critics with signs of concrete progress.

However, Mr Trump appeared to be managing expectations ahead of the summit, saying he was in “no rush” to press for North Korea’s denuclearisation.

“I don’t want to rush anybody. I just don’t want testing. As long as there’s no testing, we’re happy,” he said.

Washington had previously said that North Korea had to unilaterally give up its nuclear weapons before there could be any sanctions relief.

Vietnam is an ideal location for many reasons. It has diplomatic relations with both the US and North Korea, despite once having been enemies with the US and could be used by the US as an example of two countries working together and setting aside their past grievances.

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