It is a pleasure. I have been looking forward to meeting you.
June 13-15, 2000
An Inter-Korean Summit was held in Pyeongyang
for the first time since the division of the Korean Peninsula.
President Kim Dae-jung and First Lady Lee Hee-ho depart for Pyeongyang as the crowds look on.
10:27 a.m., June 13, 2000, Sunan Airport, Pyeongyang. President Kim Dae-jung disembarked from the presidential plane to meet Chairman Kim Jong Il who was waiting at the end of the stairs. Chairman Kim Jong Il took the South Korean leader’s hands in greeting. “It is a pleasure. I have been looking forward to meeting you.” President Kim’s greeting was plain and concise. This moment marked the first meeting of the leaders of two Koreas since the division of the Korean Peninsula.
13th
President Kim Dae-jung
landing in North Korea
14th
President Kim
Dae-jung and Chairman Kim
Kim Jong Il sitting
for the Inter-Korean Summit
15th
Announcement and
adoption of the June 15
South–North Joint Declaration
The two leaders meeting in Pyeongyang
President Kim Dae-jung and the First Lady receiving welcoming bouquets from North Korean children
The two leaders sharing a conversation at the banquet hosted by President Kim Dae-jung at Mokrangwan, Pyeongyang
The two leaders celebrate after the signing of the five-point South-North Joint Declaration at the Baekhwawon State Guesthouse in Pyeongyang
The two leaders and the delegates holding hands together and singing Our Wish at the farewell lunch
“As the saying goes, ‘when strengths and minds are united, even the will of the heaven can be bent.’ There is no limit to what we can achieve if we unite our strengths. Thus, I am confident that, one day, we will look back on this day when we are divided as a history that is past.”
President Kim Dae-jung’s speech at People’s Palace of Culture (June 13, 2000)“I believe that a new day has dawned for us. I came back with the conviction that we can put an end to the division and hostility of the last 55 years and achieve reconciliation, cooperation, and unification.”
President Kim Dae-jung’s public message on the outcome of his visit to North Korea (June 15, 2000)Despite the conflict and tension on the Peninsula, the South and the North did not cease their efforts for conciliation and cooperation to overcome the tragedies begotten by the Division. The efforts led to the first summit between the leaders of two Koreas since the Division. As a result of the inter-Korean summit, the two sides adopted the June 15th South-North Joint Declaration.
Key Elements and Significance of the June 15 South–North Joint Declaration
Source : Presidential Archives
President Kim Dae-jung (left) and Chairman Kim Jong Il attend the 2000 Inter-Korean Summit in Pyeongyang.
President Kim Dae-jung (left) and Chairman Kim Jong Il exchange copies of the South-North Joint Declaration, in Pyeongyang in 2000.
Significance of the 2000 Summit
The significance of the 2000 Inter-Korean Summit stems from the very fact that the leaders of the two Koreas met for the first time since the Division. The summit led to the adoption of the June 15 South–Korea Joint Declaration, which became the milestone that signals the transition of the inter-Korean relations from the conflict and rivalry during the Cold War era to the joint efforts for peaceful coexistence.
President Kim Dae-jung and Chairman Kim Jong Il smiling brightly at the banquet
The summit made front-page news on major news outlets across the world including Japan’s Asahi Shimbun, Nihon Keizai Shimbun, and Mainichi Shimbun; the United States’ New York Times, Newsweek, and Time; and France’s Le Monde.
President Kim Dae-jung and Chairman Kim Jong Il hugging each other in farewell
Through the summit, the two leaders reaffirmed that they have no intention of invading the other Korea and agreed to refrain from any threats toward each other. For the first time, the two sides also acknowledged that there is a common element in their plans for unification and agreed to bring their plans closer together through talks in the coming years. The two leaders further agreed that promoting exchange and cooperation between the South and the North is congruent to the growth and prosperity of the Korean people as a whole, which led to the revitalization of the efforts to reunite families separated by the Division, achievement of the inter-Korean economic cooperation, and implementation of social and cultural exchange programs between the two sides.
“We cannot expect to resolve the antipathy between the two countries for the last half a century with a single move. However, having a good start is equal to doing half of the work.”
President Kim Dae-jung’s message upon his arrival in Pyeongyang (June 13, 2000)