SEOUL, May 3 (Yonhap) -- China is considering sending Vice President Wang Qishan to attend the inauguration ceremony of incoming President Yoon Suk-yeol on May 10, political sources said Tuesday.
If Wang, considered one of the closest aides to Chinese President Xi Jinping, attends the ceremony, he will be the highest official to lead a Chinese delegation to a South Korean presidential inauguration.
The organizing committee is expected to announce details of foreign delegates Thursday.
Beijing has so far dispatched vice premier-level officials to South Korean presidential inaugurations.
In 2013, Liu Yandong, then state councilor for education, culture and science affairs, attended the ceremony for then President Park Geun-hye.
In 2008, Tang Jiaxuan, then state councilor for foreign affairs, led the Chinese delegation to the inauguration of then President Lee Myung-bak.
The United States is expected to send officials other than those in charge of diplomacy and security, as diplomatic and security officials will accompany President Joe Biden in his trip to Seoul from May 20-22 for a summit with Yoon.
Japan is reportedly considering sending Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi.
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Chinese President's right-hand man to attend Yoon's inauguration
By Ji Da-gyum
May 6, 2022 - 16:28
Wang Qishan, Vice-President of the People`s Republic of China, speaking during the Session at the Annual Meeting 2019 of the World Economic Forum in Davos, January 23, 2019. (World Economic Forum)
China's Vice President Wang Qishan, who is widely known as Chinese leader Xi Jinping's right-hand man, will attend the inauguration ceremony of President-elect Yoon Suk-yeol, Yoon's inaugural committee said on Friday.Wang is the highest-level Chinese government official dispatched for a South Korean presidential inauguration, given that the country previously sent vice premier-level officials as special envoys.
Then-Vice Premier Liu Yandong of the State Council and then-State Councilor Tang Jiaxuan were sent for the inaugurations of former Presidents Park Geun-hye and Lee Myung-bak in 2013 and 2008, respectively.
"But this time, the vice president, who is viewed as President Xi Jinping's right-hand man, will attend the ceremony," Park Joo-sun, chairman of the presidential inauguration organizing committee, said during a televised briefing.
Park said Yoon's transition team sees China's decision as expressing its intent to "cement the bond" between Seoul and Beijing while congratulating President-elect Yoon on his inauguration.
US second gentleman Douglas Emhoff, the spouse of Vice President Kamala Harris, will lead the eight-member delegation for Yoon's inauguration ceremony to be held on May 10 at the National Assembly. Two US congressmen from the Democratic Party, Ami Bera and Marilyn Strickland, will accompany Emhoff.
Yoon's inaugural committee also said the Japanese government has not finalized its list of attendees, although it is likely that the country will send a minister-level official for the ceremony. Japanese Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi is seen as the most likely to be dispatched.
Around 300 foreign guests -- including Singapore President Halimah Yacob, Central African Republic President Faustin-Archange Touadera and Russian Ambassador to South Korea Andrey Kulik -- will attend Yoon's inauguration ceremony. Former Indonesian President Megawati Soekarnoputri and former Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama will also travel to Seoul for the event.
Yoon's inaugural committee also announced that three former prisoners of war who had been captured by the North Korean army during the Korean War and later fled to South Korea will be invited to an inauguration ceremony for the first time.
"The inauguration organizing committee will do its best to honor the three war veterans who have returned to their homeland after half a century of being held captive and conscripted into forced labor," the committee said in a statement.
