-
Spurs win 10th straight, Pistons silence Thunder in battle of NBA's best
-
Germany's Merz visits China AI hub hoping for business deals
-
Post-uprising polls won't shake Nepal's delicate India-China balance
-
S.Korea's Park Chan-wook to head Cannes festival jury
-
Australian ex-PM says 'more important than ever' to ditch UK monarchy
-
Dressed for succession? Kim Jong Un, daughter fuel speculation with matching coats
-
US-Ukraine talks to open in Geneva after overnight Russian strikes
-
Export ban sparks rush to process lithium in Zimbabwe
-
Pakistani sculptor turns scrap into colossal metal artworks
-
Epstein files reveal links to cash, women, power in Africa
-
Where are Southeast Asia's data centres?
-
Where AI lives: Southeast Asia's data centre boom
-
Seoul hits fresh record on mixed day for Asia markets
-
Kyiv residents pool together for solar panels and batteries amid Russian strikes
-
North Korea's Kim says could 'get along' with US but shuns South
-
Cuba kills four on US-registered speedboat trying to 'infiltrate'
-
UK Labour party threatened by hard-right, leftists in heartland
-
Australian PM sorry after saying sexual assault survivor 'difficult'
-
Kim Jong Un spurns olive branch from 'hostile' South Korea
-
DR Congo sanctuary resists bloody forest sell-off
-
North Korea looking to replicate youth success at Women's Asian Cup
-
Deal or no deal: What's the state of Trump's tariffs?
-
Hillary Clinton to testify in US House panel's Epstein probe
-
African migrants won legal protections - then Trump deported them
-
US women's ice hockey captain responds to 'distasteful' Trump remark
-
US presses missile issue as new Iran talks to open in Geneva
-
US government accused of major 'cover-up' over Trump sex abuse claims
-
US eases Cuba oil embargo but demands 'dramatic' change
-
IMF urges US to work with partners to ease trade restrictions
-
Brumbies not getting carried away by emphatic Super Rugby start
-
Cuba coast guard kills four on US-registered speedboat
-
Juve lick wounds after painful Champions League exit
-
Real Madrid victory for 'everyone against racism': Tchouameni
-
Wallabies skipper Wilson back from injury in clash of heavyweight coaches
-
PSG coach Luis Enrique calls on team to raise their game in Champions League last 16
-
Nvidia smashes forecasts with record quarter as AI boom rolls on
-
Vinicius seals Real Champions League progress as PSG edge out Monaco
-
Galatasaray survive Juve scare to squeeze into Champions League last 16
-
PSG survive Monaco scare to reach Champions League last 16
-
Vinicius hits winner as Real Madrid eliminate Benfica after racism row
-
Harden fractures thumb in blow to in-form Cavaliers
-
Hope fades in search for missing after Brazil rains kill 46
-
Trump, Zelensky speak before Ukraine-US talks in Geneva
-
Scam centres 'destroying' Cambodia's economy, PM tells AFP
-
Last-gasp Atalanta eliminate Dortmund to reach Champions League last 16
-
Iran negotiators arrive in Geneva for high-stakes US talks
-
Antonio Tejero, leader of Spain's failed 1981 coup, dies at 93
-
Hakimi, set to face trial for rape, in PSG team for Champions League game
-
Eleven men lured into Russia war returned to South Africa
-
Brazil politicians convicted for ordering murder of black activist councilor
North Korea's Kim says could 'get along' with US but shuns South
Kim Jong Un said North Korea could "get along well" with the United States if Washington acknowledges its nuclear status, but dashed hopes of a diplomatic thaw with Seoul, state media reported Thursday.
Speculation is mounting that US President Donald Trump may seek a meeting with Kim when he travels to China later this year.
Kim made a direct appeal to the United States as a landmark congress of North Korea's ruling Workers' Party drew to a close on Wednesday evening.
If Washington "respects our country's current (nuclear) status as stipulated in the Constitution... and withdraws its hostile policy... there is no reason why we cannot get along well with the United States," Kim said, according to the Korean Central News Agency.
But Kim struck a far more combative tone when he addressed South Korea.
North Korea has "absolutely no business dealing with South Korea, its most hostile entity, and will permanently exclude South Korea from the category of compatriots", Kim said.
"As long as South Korea cannot escape the geopolitical conditions of having a border with us, the only way to live safely is to give up everything related to us and leave us alone."
North Korea's latest remarks "signal an intention to pursue relations with the US independently, without going through South Korea," Yang Moo-jin, former president of the University of North Korean Studies, told AFP.
Kim is also making clear that he will "reject any negotiations premised on denuclearisation", Yang added.
North Korea's nuclear programme has come before almost everything else in the nation for decades, even when food stocks have dried up and famine has taken hold.
High-stakes summits, crippling sanctions and prolonged diplomatic pressure have all failed to convince Pyongyang to surrender its nuclear arsenal.
Trump stepped up his courtship of Kim during a tour of Asia last year, saying he was "100 percent" open to a meeting.
He even bucked decades of US policy by conceding that North Korea was "sort of a nuclear power".
A Trump-Kim meeting would be a major breakthrough after years of deadlocked diplomacy.
- 'Grand' parade -
Their Hanoi summit in 2019 collapsed as the pair failed to come to terms on sanctions relief -- and what nuclear concessions North Korea might make in return.
Kim appeared alongside China's Xi Jinping and Russia's Vladimir Putin at a grand military parade in Beijing last year -- a striking display of his powerful friends and elevated status in global politics.
Pyongyang has particularly drawn much closer to Moscow, sending thousands of troops to aid Russia's war against Ukraine.
A "grand" military parade marked the end of the Workers' Party congress, a landmark event that directs state efforts on everything from foreign policy to war planning.
Pyongyang said a range of military units took part in the event, including troops who fought in Ukraine and those stationed near the inter-Korean border.
Held just once every five years, the days-long congress offers a rare glimpse into the workings of a nation where even mundane details are shrouded in secrecy.
"Our military will immediately launch a fierce retaliatory attack against any military hostile act committed by any force that infringes upon the sovereignty... of our country," Kim said at the parade.
J.Saleh--SF-PST