Yuma Sun

SKorea halts propaganda broadcasts over border before summit with North

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SEOUL, South Korea — South Korea halted antiPyongy­ang propaganda broadcasts across the rivals’ tense border on Monday days before their leaders are to sit down for talks expected to focus on the North’s nuclear program, Seoul officials said.

Seoul had blasted propaganda messages and K-pop songs from border loudspeake­rs since the North’s fourth nuclear test in early 2016. Pyongyang quickly matched Seoul’s campaign with its own border broadcasts and launches of balloons carrying anti-South leaflets across the border.

South Korea, however, turned off its broadcasts to try to ease military tensions and establish an environmen­t for peaceful talks, Seoul’s Defense Ministry said in a statement.

It said Seoul hopes its action would lead to both

Asides stopping mutual slander and propaganda activities. Yonhap news agency reported unspecifie­d North Korean broadcasts were sporadical­ly heard in the South on Monday morning. South Korean defense officials said they couldn’t immediatel­y confirm the status of the North’s broadcasts.

The move came amid a recent thaw of animositie­s, with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un trying to reach out to Seoul and Washington in recent months after conducting his country’s sixth and most powerful nuclear test and three long-range missile test-launches last year.

Kim and South Korean President Moon Jae-in are to meet at a border village on Friday in the rivals’ third-ever summit talks. Kim is to hold separate summit talks with President Donald Trump in May or early June in what would be the first North Korea-U.S. summit talks.

Kim has said he was willing to place his nuclear program up for negotiatio­ns. But it was unclear how serious disarmamen­t steps he would offer during the two sets of the summit talks. U.S. officials have said they want to the North to take complete disarmamen­t measures.

North Korea said Saturday it would close its nuclear testing facility and suspend nuclear and interconti­nental ballistic missile tests. But the country stopped short of suggesting it has any intention of giving up its nuclear weapons or scale back its production of missiles and their related component parts.

Trump nonetheles­s tweeted Sunday that the North has “agreed to denucleari­zation (so great for World), site closure, & no more testing!”

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