The Manila Times

Two Koreas open joint liaison office in North

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KAESONG, North Korea: North and South Korea opened a joint liaison office in the Northern city of Kaesong on Friday as they knit closer ties ahead of President Moon Jae-in’s visit to Pyongyang next week.

“A new chapter in history is open here today,” South Korean unificatio­n minister Cho Myoung- gyon told a ceremony, calling the office “another symbol of peace jointly created by the South and the North.”

The nuclear-armed North’s chief delegate Ri Son Gwon responded in kind, calling it a “substantia­l fruit nourished by the people of the north and south.”

The two Koreas have sought to pursue joint projects in multiple fields since the April summit between Moon and the North’s leader Kim Jong Un in the Demilitari­zed Zone that divides the peninsula, even as US efforts to secure concrete progress towards Pyongyang’s denucleari­zation have stalled.

Moon is due in the North’s capital on Tuesday for a three- day visit, his third summit with Kim this year after he orchestrat­ed a rapid diplomatic thaw on the peninsula and brokered June’s Singapore summit between the North Korean leader and US President Donald Trump.

There Kim backed denucleari­zation of the “Korean peninsula,” but no details were agreed and Washington and Pyongyang have sparred since over what that means and how it will be achieved.

The North was “willing to denucleari­ze,” Moon said on Thursday, while the US was willing to “end hostile relations” and provide security guarantees, “but there is a blockage as both sides are demanding each other to act first.”

Kim has sent Trump a letter seeking a second summit and held a military parade for his country’s 70th birthday without showing off any interconti­nental ballistic missiles, prompting warm tweets from the US president and raising hopes of progress.

The liaison office stands in a city that was initially part of the South after Moscow and Washington divided Korea between them in the closing days of World War II, but found itself in the North after the 1950-53 Korean War, which ended in an armistice rather than a peace treaty.

The four-story building includes separate Northern and Southern offices and a joint conference room, and Seoul’s unificatio­n ministry said it would become a “round-the- clock consultati­on and communicat­ion channel” for advancing inter-Korean relations, improving ties between the US and the North, and easing military tensions.

It will be manned by some 20 officials each from both sides, headed by a vice minister-level appointmen­t.

But critics have questioned whether the supplies provided to set it up are a violation of the multiple sanctions imposed on the North over its nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs.

Around 50 people from each side attended the ceremony, reports said, including Southern businessme­n who used to run companies in the nowshutter­ed Kaesong industrial zone.

The project, where South Korean firms employed Northern staff, opened in 2004, when it was hailed as a symbol of inter-Korean economic cooperatio­n and exchanges.

But then conservati­ve President Park Geun-hye’s government shuttered it in 2016 in response to the North’s nuclear and missile tests.

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