Yahoo – AFP,
Park Chan-Kyong, 26 Nov 2015
![]() |
South
Korean chief delegate Kim Ki-Woong (right) shakes hands with his
North Korean
counterpart Hwang Chol during their meeting at the truce village of
Panmunjom,
on November 26, 2015 (AFP Photo)
|
Seoul (AFP)
- The two Koreas agreed Thursday to hold a rare high-level dialogue next month,
in line with an accord struck in August aimed at easing cross-border tensions.
A
Unification Ministry official in Seoul said the two sides would meet at the
deputy minister level on December 11 in the Kaesong joint industrial zone, just
inside North Korea.
Agreement
on the dialogue was reached at working-level talks held Thursday in the border
truce village of Panmunjom, which ran late into the night.
![]() |
South Korea
wants regular reunions for
families separated by the 1950-53 Korean
War (AFP
Photo/KPPA)
|
Although
any talks between the two Koreas are generally welcomed as a step in the right
direction, precedent suggests it is still too early to hope for any significant
breakthrough in December.
Protocol
challenges
A similar
effort back in June 2013 saw both sides agree to hold what would have been the
first high-level dialogue for six years -- only for Pyongyang to cancel a day
before the talks were scheduled to begin.
In the end,
it was a matter of protocol -- the North felt insulted by the South's
nomination of a vice minister as its chief delegate -- that smothered the
initiative before it had even drawn breath.
Jeong said
Seoul had pushed for the Kaesong meeting to prioritise the issue of regular
reunions for families separated by the 1950-53 Korean War, which cemented the
division of the Korean peninsula.
North
Korea, however, wanted the initial focus to be on a resumption of visits by
South Korean tour groups to its scenic Mount Kumgang resort.
The tours,
a source of badly needed hard currency for the cash-strapped North, were
suspended by the South in 2008 after a female tourist was shot dead by a North
Korean guard.
Thursday's
meeting in Panmunjom marked the first inter-governmental interaction since
August when the two sides sat down to defuse a crisis that had pushed them to
the brink of an armed conflict.
Building
on August accord
That
meeting ended with a joint agreement that included the commitment to resume
high-level talks.
Under the
terms of the August accord, Seoul switched off loudspeakers blasting propaganda
messages across the border after the North expressed regret over mine blasts
that maimed two South Korean soldiers.
The South
interpreted the regret as an "apology" and admission of
responsibility, but the North's powerful National Defence Commission later
stressed that it was meant only as an expression of sympathy.
The move to
resume high-level contact comes amid diplomatic shifts in the northeast Asia
region that have left North Korea looking more isolated than ever, with Seoul
moving closer to Pyongyang's main diplomatic and economic ally China, and
improving previously strained relations with Tokyo.
Earlier
this month, the leaders of South Korea, China and Japan held their first summit
for more than three years in Seoul.
Although
the focus was on trade and other economic issues, the three declared their
"firm opposition" to the development of nuclear weapons on the Korean
peninsula.
North Korea
is already under a raft of UN sanctions imposed after its three nuclear tests
in 2006, 2009 and 2013.
South
Korean President Park Geun-Hye recently reiterated her willingness to hold
face-to-face talks with North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un -- but only if
Pyongyang showed some commitment to abandoning its nuclear weapons programme.
The two
Koreas have held two summits in the past, one in 2000 and the second in 2007.
The United
Nations is also understood to be in discussions with North Korea over a visit
by Secretary General Ban Ki-moon -- possibly before the end of the year.
Ban had
been scheduled to visit in May this year, but Pyongyang withdrew the invitation
at the last minute after he criticised a recent North Korean missile test.


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