US President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un signed a "comprehensive" document on Tuesday in Singapore aimed at the denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula. A look at some interesting facts
End of Korean warThe document signing signals the end of Korean war, which began more than 70 years ago. The leaders of North and South Korea pledged to bring a formal end to the Korean War at another summit in April.
"All options are on the table"This was the most used phrase at the high-level meeting. According to records, the phrase came up some 25 times in exchanges with administration officials.
See my BeastEarlier in the day, President Trump gave Jong-un a rare peek inside the US presidential limousine. The two leaders walked up to the US limousine nicknamed The Beast.
Toilet of my ownKim Jong-un reportedly brought his own toilet to Singapore. The secretive and paranoid North Korean leader doesn't want to leave waste behind, fearing it could be studied to learn information about him.
US journalists vs Korean reportersThe White House limited the number of American journalists in the press pool with Trump to match the number of North Korean reporters following Kim, reports have said. It is interesting since the media in North Korea is state-controlled.
Welcome Trump! According to Korean media, Kim arrived at the summit venue 7 minutes earlier than Trump to "show respect." "It's our culture, the young one should arrive earlier than the older one," one of the newspapers reported
Watching a sci-fiAware of the significance of the summit, Kim said that many of those watching would think it was a scene from a "science fiction movie".
$20-million summitThe host country, Singapore, has spent a whopping $20 million for the historic Trump-Kim summit. While Singapore was responsible for security in the public spaces, the United States and North Korea controlled the safety of their leaders.
Handsome and thin According to news reports, Kim didn't look too pleased when Trump joked about photographers making the two leaders look "nice, handsome and thin" before they sat down for their meeting.
2,500 reporters from 44 countriesTrump-Kim Summit in Singapore was one of the most awaited events of this year, and according to reports over 2,500 media houses from 44 countries applied for accreditation.