* Kim arrives via Air China plane from Pyongyang
* Trump to arrive later on Sunday
* Summit to discuss ending the North's nuclear programme
* Meeting can give Kim international recognition

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un landed in Singapore on Sunday ahead of a summit with US President Donald Trump that could end a nuclear stand-off between the old foes and transform the secretive, impoverished Asian country.

When Trump and Kim meet on the resort island of Sentosa on Tuesday they will be making history even before they start.

Enemies since the 1950-53 Korean War, the leaders of North Korea and the United States have never met previously - or even spoken on the phone.

Kim arrived at Singapore's Changi Airport after his longest trip overseas as head of state wearing his trademark dark ‘Mao suit’ and distinctive high cut hairstyle.

He was greeted by Singapore's foreign minister, Vivian Balakrishnan, who posted a picture on Twitter of him shaking hands with Kim and the message: ‘Welcomed Chairman Kim Jong Un, who has just arrived in Singapore.’

He disembarked an Air China jet followed by top officials including Foreign Minister Ri Yong Ho and Kim Yong Chol, a close aide of Kim's who has been instrumental in the diplomacy that culminated in the Tuesday.

Later on Sunday, Kim left the St. Regis hotel in central Singapore in a motorcade that included his stretch Mercedes Benz limousine and travelled the short distance through Singapore's glitzy shopping streets to the presidential palace, known as the Istana, where he met Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong.

Kim, in his first public comments since arriving, said Singapore's role would be recorded in history if the summit was a success.

The US delegation, en route from the G7 meeting in Canada, is scheduled to arrive at Singapore's Paya Lebar Air Base at 8:35 p.m. (1235 GMT) and Trump will stay at the Shangri-La Hotel, according to the White House.

Trump is set to meet Lee on Monday.

Officials onboard Air Force One include Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, National Security Adviser John Bolton, White House Chief of Staff John Kelly and White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders.

HIGH-STAKES DIPLOMACY

At stake at the summit are North Korea's nuclear weapons and peace on the Korean peninsula. North Korea spent decades developing nuclear weapons, culminating in the test of a thermonuclear device in 2017. It also successfully tested missiles that had enough range to reach the US mainland.

The tests came amid a campaign of ‘maximum pressure,’ led by the United States, that tightened economic sanctions against North Korea and raised the possibility of military action.

In a New Year's address, Kim said his country had completed development of its nuclear programme and would focus on economic development, suggesting a meeting with South Korea.

After a flurry of contacts between the two Koreas, South Korean officials suggested to Trump in March that Kim would be willing to meet face-to-face.

The summit comes after weeks of sometimes-contentious discussions and was briefly cancelled amid North Korean outrage over messaging from some US advisers.

Many remain sceptical Kim will ever completely abandon his nuclear programme. They believe his latest engagement is aimed at getting the United States to ease crippling economic sanctions that have squeezed the impoverished country.

For Trump, a successful summit will see him achieve badly needed recognition on the international stage ahead of congressional elections in November.

Believed to be 34, Kim is one of the youngest heads of state in the world and looks an unlikely candidate to be making history of the kind that has eluded his father and grandfather, both past leaders of North Korea.

But since taking power in 2011 after his father's death, the youthful Kim has displayed a mixture of ruthlessness, pragmatism and statecraft to get this prize: to sit across the table with the leader of the United States and be treated as an equal.

The two countries were on the brink of war last year, with their leaders trading insults and threats, until Kim made a dramatic offer in March to meet Trump and discuss nuclear disarmament, which the American president quickly accepted.

Kim's journey from international pariah to being regarded as a responsible head of state has taken just a few months.

The two leaders meet at 9 a.m. (0100 GMT) on Tuesday at the Capella on Sentosa island, a refurbished British Army artillery mess that is now one of Singapore's most expensive luxury hotels.

A source involved in the planning of Kim's trip said he was scheduled to leave Singapore at 2 p.m. on Tuesday.

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