Saturday, 8 June 2013

Koreas poised to hold key talks

Source BBC News@ tienganhvui.com


South Korean delegates prepare to leave for Panmunjom. 9 June 2013South Korea has sent three delegates to the meeting in Panmunjom



Officials from North and South Korea are due to hold their first government-level talks in more than two years.


The talks are to take place at Panmunjom, a military compound in the demilitarised zone between the two countries.


The meeting comes after months of rising tension and war-like gestures from both sides.


They culminated in the suspension in April of all activity in the Kaesong joint commercial zone.


The zone, which is seen as a symbol of North-South co-operation, had run successfully just inside North Korea for more than eight years.


With tensions between the two countries easing, South Korea invited the North to high level talks in Seoul, but Pyongyang said it wanted lower-level discussions first.


The BBC's Kevin Kim in Seoul says it is unclear how long the meeting will go on for and what issues will be discussed.


However, the South Korean delegation said it hoped to negotiate details and plans for ministerial-level talks later this week, he adds.


The South's three-person delegation - led by the director of the Unification Ministry - left Seoul just before 08:00 (2300 GMT Saturday) for Panmunjom.


Ties between the two Koreas deteriorated earlier this year in the wake of the North's nuclear test on 12 February.


Pyongyang withdrew its workers from Kaesong in April, apparently angered by tightened UN sanctions in the wake of the nuclear test and annual South Korea-US military drills.


Hotline

Around 53,000 North Korean workers are employed at the Kaesong factory complex by more than 120 South Korean factories.


The zone is a key source of revenue for the North and the biggest contributor to inter-Korean trade.


Last Thursday the North offered talks with the South on the resumption of operations and said it would reconnect a Red Cross hotline if Seoul - which had been seeking such talks - agreed.


The talks closely follow a summit in California between US President Barack Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping.


Both leaders agreed that North Korea had to denuclearise and that neither country would accept North Korea as a nuclear-armed state, US National Security Advisor Tom Donilon said on Saturday.


China is seen as a key ally of Pyongyang.





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