South Korean ex-first lady bound for North on trip 'personally approved by Kim Jong-un'

The widow of late South Korean president Kim Dae-jung will make a rare trip to North Korea on Wednesday, raising cautious hopes of a thaw in cross-border tensions despite Seoul playing down the trip as a purely personal affair.
The July 5-8 visit by Lee Hee-ho is ostensibly humanitarian in nature, with the 93-year-old planning to tour a children’s hospital, a maternity home and an orphanage in Pyongyang.
But all eyes are on whether she will meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, who has yet to receive any South Korean citizen since formally assuming power more than three years ago.
The two have already met once – when Lee visited to pay her respects following the death of Kim Jong-un’s father and former leader Kim Jong-il in December 2011.
Her late husband is best known for his “sunshine policy” of engagement with the North that led to a historic summit with Jong-il in 2000.
The policy – which helped Kim Dae-jung win a Nobel Peace Prize in 2000 – was largely abandoned when a conservative administration took power in Seoul in 2008 and cross-border relations soured.