This Friday will be a historic day. Moon Jae In, President of the Republic of Korea , and Kim Jong Un, North Korea's leader, will sit together in the Peace House at Panmunjom for an inter-Korean leaders' summit. The talks are expected to focus on denuclearisation and peace on the Korean Peninsula as well as inter-Korean relations.
To attend this inter-Korean summit the North Korean leader will cross to the south at the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) dividing the peninsula. This carries a significant symbolism in contrast to the previous two summit meetings which were held in North Korea.
In recent few months, the world has been surprised with the speed and scope of developments on the peninsula as almost all media had spent several years on reporting North Korea's provocations - headlines focused on the North's nuclear development and tests of intercontinental ballistic missiles that could presumably reach faraway places such as New Zealand.
This year North Korea stepped out of isolation and sent its athletes to the PyeongChang Winter Olympics with 92 other countries. The world witnessed North and South Korean athletes marching together under a unified Korean flag in PyeongChang.
A series of diplomatic steps during and after the Olympics have become the seeds for the breakthrough on the Korean peninsula and the restart of dialogue. Among these steps, visits of the special envoy of President Moon to North Korea and the United States were highlights.