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A "Durty Donald" and a "Kim Jong Yum" - Trump and Kim inspired burgers are freshly made in a restaurant in Hanoi, Vietnam. Image Credit: AP

HANOI: When Lee Parry heard that North Korean leader Kim Jong UN and US President Donald Trump would meet in Hanoi, he knew he wanted to be part of the action and soon booked a trip.

He joined the ‘Trump-Kim Vietnam Summit Tour’ being put on this week by a travel company whose slogan offers “destinations your mother would rather you stayed away from” — including North Korea.

The trip to the Vietnamese capital is not exactly a daring one, but a chance for visitors to be part of the flurry surrounding Trump and Kim’s second meeting this week.

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Durty Bird restaurant owner Colin Kelly stands next to a menu offering Trump-Kim summit special burgers in Hanoi, Vietnam. Image Credit: AP

“It’s a lot better than seeing it on Twitter or Facebook,” said Parry, 36, a British student living in China.

“To be at the forefront of that and to get to see it in the flesh was too good to pass up.”

On the agenda are several well trodden stops on the Hanoi tourist trail: The Ho Chi Minh mausoleum, the war museum and the former “Hanoi Hilton” jail where American prisoners of war including John McCain were held during the Vietnam War.

Also included are some summit-specific sites such as the Melia Hotel, where Kim is expected to stay.

“If it ends up being successful, if it ends up being a good summit, we’ve witnessed history in the making,” said Young Pioneer Tours (YPT) director Gareth Johnson.

YPT is the firm that took US student Otto Warmbier to North Korea, where he was convicted of subversive activities for trying to steal a propaganda poster and detained for 18 months, dying shortly after being released.

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A Vietnamese policeman stands guard at the Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum in Hanoi, ahead of the second US-North Korea summit. Image Credit: AFP

Kim arrived in Hanoi Tuesday following a marathon 4,000-kilometre journey through China on his trademark olive green armoured train.

The capital’s streets were lined with armed soldiers and military vehicles — highly unusual for a foreign leader’s visit to Vietnam.

The city has been swarming with press in recent days with some 2,600 journalists registered to cover the summit on Wednesday and Thursday.

Joining the media frenzy was part of the appeal for Neel Sapre, an Indian sales manager on the tour.

“It was awesome, I’ve never seen so many press people at one location so it was fun being among the hype,” he told AFP in Lenin Square, beneath a statue of the Soviet revolutionary.