BBC News, 28
May 2013
Korea
crisis
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| Kaesong was seen as one of the last remaining symbols of inter-Korean co-operation |
In a
statement carried by state media, North Korea said it was prepared to discuss
with the businessmen how normal operations could be resumed.
But South
Korea expressed worry about its citizens' safety and asked that
government-level talks be held.
Operations
at the joint industrial complex have been suspended since the North withdrew
its workers in April.
North
Korea's Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea (CPRK), responsible
for ties with South Korea, said it would guarantee the businessmen's safety.
"We
have given permission for the visit and can even discuss the shipment of
products at the industrial complex," Yonhap news agency quoted the
committee as saying.
South Korea
"may send with them members" of the governing body that oversees the
complex, the committee added.
But a
spokesman for South Korea's Unification Ministry, which handles relations with
the North, said what was needed at this stage was talks between both
governments, which Seoul has been requesting.
Some 123
South Korean companies have factories inside the Kaesong Industrial Complex,
which lies just across the border inside North Korea.
The firms
employ some 53,000 North Koreans and the zone is a key revenue earner for the
North.
But
Pyongyang withdrew its workers two months ago as North-South tensions escalated
following Pyongyang's third nuclear test in February.

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