Koreas summit: North Korean media hail 'historic' meeting

Friday's summit between the leaders of North and South Korea was a ‘historic meeting’ paving the way for the start of a new era, North Korea's media say.
The North's Kim Jong-un and Moon Jae-in of South Korea agreed to work to rid the peninsula of nuclear weapons.
The official KCNA news agency hailed this as a ‘new milestone’ in the path to joint prosperity. It also carried the full text of the declaration.
China and the United States both welcomed the news, reports the BCC.
However, US President Donald Trump said he would continue to exert maximum pressure on North Korea, as he prepares to meet Kim in the coming weeks.
After the talks at the border, Kim and Moon also agreed to push towards turning the armistice that ended the Korean War in 1953 into a peace treaty this year.
The summit came just months after warlike rhetoric from North Korea.
What is in the agreement?
Details of how denuclearisation would be achieved were not made clear, and many analysts remain sceptical about the North's apparent enthusiasm for engagement.
An issue for the North is the security guarantee extended by the US, a nuclear power, to South Korea and Japan and its military presence in both countries.
Previous inter-Korean agreements have included similar pledges but were later abandoned after the North resorted to nuclear and missile tests and the South elected more conservative presidents.
Kim said the two leaders had agreed to work to prevent a repeat of the region's ‘unfortunate history’ in which progress had ‘fizzled out’.
‘There may be backlash, hardship and frustration,’ he said, adding: ‘A victory cannot be achieved without pain.’
Other points the leaders agreed on in a joint statement were:
An end to ‘hostile activities’ between the two nations
Changing the demilitarised zone (DMZ) that divides the country into a ‘peace zone’ by ceasing propaganda broadcasts
An arms reduction in the region pending the easing of military tension
To push for four-way talks involving the US and China
Organising a reunion of families left divided by the war
Connecting and modernising railways and roads across the border
Further joint participation in sporting events, including this year's Asian Games
The commitment to denuclearisation does not explicitly refer to North Korea halting its nuclear activities but rather to the aim of ‘a nuclear-free Korean peninsula’.