Google – AFP, Jung Ha-Won (AFP), 14 August 2013
![]() |
A bus
carrying South Korean delegates drive past a soldier at a military
checkpoint
in Paju on August 14, 2013 (AFP, Jung Yeon-Je)
|
SEOUL —
North and South Korea agreed Wednesday to work on reopening a joint industrial
zone shut down in April amid soaring military tensions -- and vowed to prevent
its closure being repeated.
But they
failed to set a precise date for the resumption of operations at the shuttered
complex in Kaesong, and the South Korean side sounded a note of caution after
the deal was announced.
"This
agreement is not an end but only a beginning," its chief negotiator Kim
Ki-Woong told reporters.
"What's
more important is how both Koreas can implement the agreement ... we can't say
for sure when (Kaesong) will actually reopen," Kim added.
![]() |
Korea joint
industrial estate (AFP/Graphic)
|
It may also
help ease tensions before the launch of joint South Korea-US military exercises
on Monday which the North has warned could bring the divided peninsula "to
the brink of war".
"This
is a good sign and it will help the two sides solve other pending issues,"
said Kim Yong-Hyun, a North Korean expert at Dongguk University in Seoul.
South
Korean President Park Geun-Hye said she hoped the agreement would "set the
stage for a fresh start in relations".
The
five-point deal committed both sides to "active efforts" to resume
normal operations in Kaesong after inspecting the 123 shuttered South Korean
factories housed in the complex.
A joint
committee will be set up to oversee the process and discuss compensation for
any economic losses suffered.
Established
in 2004 as a rare symbol of inter-Korean cooperation, Kaesong was a major
hard-currency earner for the North, bringing it $80 million a year. Pyongyang's
decision to shut it down took many observers by surprise.
The project
had managed to ride out previous North-South crises without serious disruption,
but it eventually fell victim to an extended period of heightened tension
following the North's third nuclear test in February.
Pyongyang
initially barred access to the park, which lies 10 kilometers (six miles)
inside the North Korean border, and then withdrew its 53,000-strong workforce
from the South's factories.
![]() |
Representatives
from Kaesong-based
firms hold a rally on August 14, 2013
(AFP, Jung Yeon-Je)
|
Wednesday's
agreement suggested a compromise had been reached where the North accepted the
worker pullout had closed Kaesong, but both sides jointly promised to ensure it
remained open in the future.
"The
South and the North will prevent the current suspension of the Kaesong
industrial complex caused by the workers' withdrawal from being repeated
again," it said.
It also
included a pledge to promote foreign investment in Kaesong -- a key South
Korean demand.
The North
had proposed the seventh round of talks last week, just hours after Seoul
announced it was going to start compensation payments totalling $250 million to
the businesses impacted by Kaesong's closure.
The payout
move was widely seen as the first step towards a permanent withdrawal from the
zone.
Wednesday's
accord was immediately welcomed by the South Korean company owners, who had
complained that both Seoul and Pyongyang were using their livelihoods as a
political football.
![]() |
North
Korean leader Kim Jong-Un (R) in
Pyongyang on August 10, 2013 (KCNA
via
KNS/AFP/File)
|
Monday's
annual South Korea-US drill, dubbed "Ulchi Freedom Guardian",
involves about 50,000 South Korean and 30,000 US troops practising a North
Korean invasion scenario.
Although
largely computer-simulated, it is viewed as highly provocative by North Korea,
which has already issued dire warnings of its impact on stability on the
peninsula.
"If
the drill takes place, conditions in the region will become unpredictable and
escalate to the brink of war," the North's ruling party newspaper Rodong
Sinmun said last month.
The North
had cited similar joint exercises earlier this year as the main trigger for
Kaesong's closure.
Park proposes reunion for families separated since Korean war
North Koreans given hope of South inheritances
Related Articles:
Park proposes reunion for families separated since Korean war
North Koreans given hope of South inheritances




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