South Korea
has offered to hold high-level talks with North Korea on various issues to pave
the way for the unification of the peninsula. There was no immediate response
from the North.
South
Korea's unification minister, Ryoo Kihl-jae told a press conference in Seoul on
Monday that he was willing to meet with his North Korean counterpart in either
of the countries' capitals for the rare high-level talks next month.
"I
hope that the North will show an active response to this offer," Ryoo told
reporters. "We are willing to discuss any issues of mutual concern,"
he added.
There was,
however, no immediate response from the North and it wasn't clear if any
response would be coming.
The last such
talks were held last February and resulted in the reunions of family members
separated by the division of the peninsula following the 1950-53 Korean War.
Ryoo indicated that organizing a similar meeting would be high on the agenda of
his proposed talks.
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| Koreans had emotional family reunions in February |
Ryoo said
he also envisioned discussing a range of other issues to prepare for the
unification of the country. Previous talk of unification, including by President Park Geun-hye at her last New Year's press conference, has drawn an angry
response from the North, which has dismissed the idea as a plot to topple the
communist regime in Pyongyang.
Talks
proposal comes amid tensions
High-level
talks between the two Koreas had also been planned for October, but this was
followed by a renewed rise in tensions fueled by a series of minor military
clashes and the meeting was cancelled.
North Korea
also expressed anger over South Korean activists sending anti-Pyongyang leaflets across the border using hot-air balloons, and slammed Seoul for not
doing enough to stop the practice.
Tensions
between Pyongyang and Seoul's key ally, the United States are currently even more strained than usual, amid Washington's accusations that North Korea was
behind a theat to cinema goers viewing the film "The Interview,"
which pokes fun at North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. Pyongyang has denied being
responsible for the threat, and has in turn accused Washington of being behind
an Internet outage in the isolated nation over the past week.


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