North Korea reverses field on Ban Ki-moon visit, according to UN chief

The current United Nations Secretary-General is a native of South Korea and served as foreign minister from 2004-06.

United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon attends the UN Academic Impact Seoul Forum in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, May 20, 2015.

Ahn Young-joon/AP

May 20, 2015

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said on Wednesday his plan to go to North Korea this week to visit an industrial complex had been scrapped after Pyongyang retracted its earlier approval, calling the decision "deeply regrettable."

The move by Pyongyang to abort Ban's visit to the Kaesong factory park on Thursday dashes what would have been a rare diplomatic opening by reclusive North Korea amid a tense standoff with South Korea. The park is just a few minutes' drive north of the heavily fortified border between the rival states.

"Early this morning, the authorities of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea informed us, through their diplomatic channels, that they were reversing their decision for me to visit the Kaesong industrial complex," Ban said in a speech, using North Korea's official name.

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"No explanation was given for this last-minute change," he said at a conference in Seoul.

Ban is South Korean and served as foreign minister from 2004-06, a period of intense negotiations aimed at ending the North's nuclear program. Those talks led to a 2005 deal that later fell apart.

North Korea's state media have not carried news of Ban's planned visit or the decision to withdraw the invitation.

On Tuesday, Ban announced the plan to visit the special economic zone run jointly by the North and the South that is the only ongoing vestige of cooperation borne from their first summit meeting 15 years ago.

Ban had said he hoped his visit, which had been set for Thursday, would help reopen dialog between the two sides.

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Ban was to be the third serving UN chief to go to the North and the first since Boutros Boutros-Ghali visited in 1993.

This news comes just a week after the Monitor reported on the execution of North Korea's defense minister.

North Korea’s defense minister was reportedly executed for disloyalty and showing disrespect to leader Kim Jong-un, according to South Korea’s intelligence agency. The move underscores the young ruler’s drive to consolidate power, analysts say, but could also be a sign of instability in Pyongyang.

The People's Armed Forces Minister Hyon Yong-chol was killed in front of hundreds of spectators at a shooting range on the Kanggon Military Training Area in late April, according to reports from a South Korean National Intelligence Service briefing. Intelligence reports on North Korea’s activities always have to be treated with a degree of skepticism due to the nation’s secretive and closed-off nature. A recent report from the US-based Committee for Human Rights in North Korea, however, stated that satellite imagery of the area, just outside Pyongyang, appeared to corroborate the account.