Yahoo – AFP,
Park Chan-Kyong, January 9, 2018
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| The talks were held in Panmunjom, the truce village in the Demilitarized Zone that splits the Korean peninsula (AFP Photo/KOREA POOL) |
Seoul (AFP)
- North Korea will send its athletes to the Winter Olympics in the South, the
rivals said Tuesday after their first formal talks in more than two years
following high tensions over Pyongyang's nuclear weapons programme.
The two
sides also decided to hold military talks and to restore a military hotline
closed since February 2016.
Seoul and
Olympic organisers have been keen for Pyongyang - which boycotted the 1988
Summer Games in the South Korean capital -- to take part in what they
repeatedly proclaimed a "peace Olympics" in Pyeongchang next month.
But the
North had given no indication it would do so until leader Kim Jong-Un's New Year
address last week, instead pursuing its banned weapons programmes in defiance
of United Nations sanctions, launching missiles capable of reaching the United
States and detonating its sixth and most powerful nuclear test.
"The
North Korean side will dispatch a National Olympic Committee delegation,
athletes, cheerleaders, art performers' squad, spectators, a taekwondo
demonstration team and a press corps and the South will provide necessary
amenities and facilities," they said in a joint statement.
Tuesday's
talks were held in Panmunjom, the truce village in the Demilitarised Zone that
splits the peninsula.
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The
Panmunjom joint security area (AFP Photo/Laurence CHU)
|
The North's
delegation walked over the Military Demarcation Line marking the border to the
Peace House venue on the southern side, just yards from where a defector ran
across in a hail of bullets two months ago.
Looking
businesslike, the South's Unification minister Cho Myoung-Gyon and the North's
chief delegate Ri Son-Gwon shook hands at the entrance to the building, and
again across the negotiating table.
Ri wore a
badge on his left lapel bearing an image of the country's founding father Kim
Il-Sung and his son and successor Kim Jong-Il, while Cho sported one depicting
the South Korean flag.
"Let's
present the people with a precious new year's gift," said Ri. "There
is a saying that a journey taken by two lasts longer than the one travelled
alone."
The
atmosphere was friendlier than at past meetings, and Cho told Ri: "The
people have a strong desire to see the North and South move toward peace and
reconciliation."
But there
was no mention in the joint statement of a proposal by Seoul to resume reunions
of families left divided by the Korean War, or of an offer by the North to send
a high-level delegation to the Games.
Ri also
told South Korean journalists that denuclearisation was not on the table and
not an issue for the two to discuss.
"The
target of all our nuclear and hydrogen bombs and ICBMs and all other
sophisticated weapons is the US," he said. "These weapons are not
aimed at our brethren."
There were
"many problems" to settle between the two sides, he added, warning of
"unexpected obstacles" down the road.
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The
atmosphere was friendlier than at past meetings between North and South
Korea
(AFP Photo/Ed JONES)
|
'Peace
Olympics'
Even so it
was a radically different tone from the rhetoric of recent months, which have
seen the North's leader Kim and US President Donald Trump trade personal
insults and threats of war.
Olympic
organisers welcomed the North's participation in Pyeongchang, just 80
kilometres (50 miles) south of the DMZ, and a Unification ministry official
said the Games would be "a Peace Festival for all the people in the
world".
International
Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach said Pyongyang's decision to take part
in the Games was a "great step forward in the Olympic spirit".
Only two
athletes from the North have so far qualified for the Olympics, but hundreds of
young female North Korean cheerleaders have created a buzz at three previous
international sporting events in the South.
According
to South Korean reports any high-level delegation accompanying the team could
include Kim's younger sister Yo-Jong, who is a senior member of the ruling
Workers' Party.
Beyond
the Games
According
to the Unification ministry official, Tuesday's meeting "laid the
foundation for restoring the severed inter-Korean ties and normalising
them".
It came
after Seoul responded to Kim's New Year speech with an offer of high-level
dialogue, and last week a civilian hotline was restored after being suspended
for almost two years.
But
Pyongyang has snubbed previous attempts by Seoul to set up further family
reunions -- one of the most emotive legacies of the Korean War -- saying it
will not do so unless several of its citizens are returned by the South.
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Both sides
expressed the desire to address wider questions than the
Games (AFP Photo)
|
It was
unclear when the proposed military talks -- which would be the first of their
kind since 2014 -- would be held.
"Having
the North Korean athletes and delegations at Pyeongchang will help turn South
Korean public sentiment about the North more favourable," said Lim
Eul-Chul, a professor of North Korean studies at Kyungnam University in Seoul.
Pyongyang
would then probably seek to resume lucrative joint economic projects, such as
the suspended Kaesong industrial complex, he added -- although it is not clear
whether that would be in compliance with UN sanctions.
The North
"appears to be trying to use the improvement in ties with the South as a
springboard to resume talks with the US, which holds the key to controlling or
possibly easing sanctions", Lim told AFP.
But
Pyongyang's state media reiterated its condemnations of Trump on Tuesday.
The United
States and South Korea agreed last week to delay their joint military exercises
until after the Games, apparently to help calm nerves.
Trump said
at the weekend he hoped the rare talks between the two Koreas would go
"beyond the Olympics" and that Washington could join the process at a
later stage.
But US
ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley said there was "no
turnaround" in the US stance: that the North must stop nuclear tests for
talks with Washington.




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