N. Korea Reopens Communication Channel with South | Be Korea-savvy

N. Korea Reopens Communication Channel with South


Two Koreas held their first contact via a cross-border communication channel in nearly two years on Wednesday as the North reopened the suspended hotline one day after Seoul offered high-level talks. (Image: Yonhap)

Two Koreas held their first contact via a cross-border communication channel in nearly two years on Wednesday as the North reopened the suspended hotline one day after Seoul offered high-level talks. (Image: Yonhap)

SEOUL, Jan. 3 (Korea Bizwire) –The two Koreas held their first contact via a cross-border communication channel in nearly two years on Wednesday as the North reopened the suspended hotline one day after Seoul offered high-level talks.

North Korea announced earlier in the day that its leader, Kim Jong-un, ordered the reopening of the channel at the shared border village of Panmunjom.

It came after Kim extended an overture to Seoul on New Year’s Day, saying that his country is willing to send a delegation to the PyeongChang Olympics to be held in the South next month.

“By upholding a decision by the leadership, we will make close contact with South Korea in a sincere and honest manner,” said Ri Son-gwon, the head of North Korea’s agency handling inter-Korean affairs, according to its state-run television station. “We will discuss working-level issues over our potential dispatch of the delegation.”

North Korea closed two inter-Korean communication channels — a hotline installed at the liaison office at the truce village and a military channel — in February 2016 in protest at Seoul’s shutdown of a joint industrial complex.

The hotlines had not been physically severed, but the dialogue channel was not operating by virtue of North Korea’s lack of response to South Korean officials’ daily attempts at contact by phone.

“A North Korean official first contacted the South side via the channel,” said South Korea’s unification ministry. Details over what both sides talked about were not made public.

The resumption of the liaison hotline indicates a step forward in improving long-stalled inter-Korean ties despite North Korea’s nuclear and missile provocations.

The North’s leader extended the rare rapprochement toward Seoul while maintaining his country’s nuclear threat against the United States.

Kim “highly appreciated and welcomed” President Moon Jae-in’s support of his peace offer, according to North Korean official Ri.

“The leader stressed that whether inter-Korean ties can be improved totally depends on North and South Korea,” the official said.

But Ri did not specify whether the country would accept the format of high-level talks proposed by Seoul.

Earlier, South Korea’s presidential office Cheong Wa Dae welcomed the North’s move to reopen the hotline, calling it a move toward direct frequent dialogue between the divided Koreas.

“We will consult with North Korea over working-level issues in connection to our dialogue offer through the hotline,” South Korea’s unification ministry said in a statement.

 

(Yonhap)

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