South Korea's Moon promises final push for North Korea peace
The Hindu
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un made no mention of Mr. Moon's calls for a declaration officially ending the 1950-1953 Korean War, or of stalled denuclearisation talks with the United States
South Korean President Moon Jae-in vowed on January 3 to use his last months in office to press for a diplomatic breakthrough with North Korea, despite public silence from Pyongyang over his attempts for a declaration of peace between the two sides.
"The government will pursue normalisation of inter-Korean relations and an irreversible path to peace until the end," Mr. Moon said in his final New Year's address before his five-year term ends in May. "I hope efforts for dialogue will continue in the next administration too."
In his own address on New Year's Eve, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un made no mention of Mr. Moon's calls for a declaration officially ending the 1950-1953 Korean War, or of stalled denuclearisation talks with the United States.

“Judicial time is a valuable public resource. Every frivolous or misconceived invocation of constitutional jurisdiction results in diversion of time from genuinely deserving litigants,” said the Madurai Bench of the Madras High Court while imposing a cost of ₹50,000 on a man from Theni district who filed a petition with an unusual prayer: permission to conduct daily protests till the ‘World War’ ends.












