Related
articles
- Typhoon Kills Four, Causes Flooding in Vietnam
- North Korea Olympics Squad Returns to Heroes’ Welcome
- South Korea’s Hanwha Chief Jailed for 4 Years
- Japan Ministers Visit Controversial War Shrine
- Seoul Urges Japan to Resolve Wartime Sex Slavery Issue
North Korea
has agreed to meet South Korean private groups for talks about aid following
deadly floods, officials said Thursday, despite icy relations between the two
governments.
The North’s
Council for National Reconciliation sent a message last week to the South’s
non-governmental organizations accepting their offer of discussions, the
South’s unification ministry said.
An official
of South’s Korea NGO Council for Cooperation (KNCC) with North Korea told AFP
they plan to visit Kaesong city just across the border for the meeting on
Friday.
The
ministry, which must by law authorize all cross-border contacts, said it was
still considering whether to allow the visit.
KNCC said
it wants to reach agreement as soon as possible so it can ship aid before the
Chuseok holidays from September 29-October 1.
Cross-border
relations have been frosty for years and worsened sharply in recent months. The
North threatens “sacred war” against the South’s conservative government for
alleged insults to, and plots against, its regime.
The North
is grappling with the after-effects of floods that killed 169 people and left
400 missing, according to Pyongyang’s official figures.
Its state
media said floods and torrential rain between late June and the end of July
also made 212,200 people homeless.
Floods were
said to have washed away or inundated 65,280 hectares (161,310 acres) of
cropland, in a country already suffering severe food shortages.
United
Nations agencies have visited the worst-hit areas to assess needs and are
delivering food and other aid.
The country
suffered a famine in the 1990s that killed hundreds of thousands and still
struggles to feed its people even in normal times.
In February
the United States reached a deal to offer the North 240,000 tons of food in
return for a freeze on nuclear and missile tests.
But the
plan was scrapped after Pyongyang’s failed rocket launch in April, seen by the
US and its allies as an attempted ballistic missile test.
Agence France-Presse

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.