BSS
  26 Sep 2023, 09:58

South Korean president to make state visit to UK

LONDON, Sept 26, 2023 (BSS/AFP) - South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol will
make a state visit to Britain in November after accepting an invitation from
King Charles III, Buckingham Palace announced on Tuesday.

Yoon will be only the second foreign leader to make a state visit to the UK
since Charles became monarch in September last year, following the death of
his mother Queen Elizabeth II.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa was the first, last November.

Charles, 74, and 76-year-old Queen Camilla will host Yoon, 62, and his wife
Kim Keon Hee, 51, at Buckingham Palace. No date was given yet for the visit.

The South Korean leader garnered global attention in April during a week-long
state visit to the United States, when he surprised guests with a rendition
of his favourite song, "American Pie".

The impromptu singing performance occurred at a White House dinner, after a
request by US President Joe Biden.

However, a repeat in London is seen as unlikely. State banquets in Buckingham
Palace's grand ballroom are typically more sedate affairs, with speeches and
toasts alongside a formal dinner.

A string orchestra usually provides the musical backdrop to such events,
which are normally attended by more than 160 guests.

Charles and Yoon met previously at the reception for heads of state and
official overseas guests at the palace on the eve of his late mother's
funeral.

The South Korean president, a conservative, was accused by opponents of being
disrespectful during the visit, after missing the opportunity to view her
coffin lying in state.

He blamed that on heavy traffic.

He also courted controversy last year after being caught on a microphone
swearing and making disparaging comments about US lawmakers after a chat with
Biden at the UN General Assembly.

The footage went viral in South Korea.

Yoon, who narrowly won power in a presidential election in March last year,
is constitutionally prohibited from serving more than a single term, which
ends in 2027.