The Peterborough Examiner

Korean guard posts get dismantled

Marks the start of the agreement signed by both Korean leaders

- CHANG YONG JUN AND HYUNG-JIN KIM

CHEORWON, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF — South Korea exploded one of its own front-line guard posts Thursday, sending plumes of thick, black smoke into the sky above the border with North Korea, in the most dramatic scene to date in the rivals’ efforts to reduce animositie­s that sparked last year’s fears of war.

Last week, the two Koreas finished withdrawin­g troops and firearms from some of the guard posts along their border before dismantlin­g them. The steps are part of agreements signed in September during a meeting between their leaders in Pyongyang, North Korea’s capital.

On Thursday, South Korea’s military invited a group of journalist­s to watch the destructio­n of a guard post with dynamite in the central border area of Cheorwon. The journalist­s were asked to stay hundreds of metres away as black smoke enveloped the hilly border area. They later watched soldiers and other workers bulldoze another guard post.

Most of the South Korean guard posts are being destroyed with constructi­on equipment for environmen­tal and safety reasons, but dynamite was used for the first structure because of its location on a high hill where it was difficult to use excavators, the Defence Ministry said. North Korea is demolishin­g its guard posts with explosives, according to South Korean media.

The guard posts are inside the 248-kilometre-long, four-kmwide border called the Demilitari­zed Zone. Despite its name, it’s the world’s most heavily fortified border with an estimated two million landmines planted in and near the zone. The area has been the site of violence and bloodshed since the 1945 division of the Korean Peninsula, and civilians need special government approval to enter the zone.

The Koreas each agreed to dismantle or disarm 11 of their guard posts by the end of this month before jointly verifying the destructio­n next month. South Korea had about 60 posts inside the DMZ guarded by layers of barbed wire and manned by troops with machine-guns. North Korea was estimated to have 160 such front-line posts.

Under the September agreements, the Koreas are also disarming the shared border village of Panmunjom and clearing mines from another DMZ area where they plan their first-ever joint searches for Korean War dead. They’ve also halted live-fire exercises along the border.

The deals are among a set of steps they have taken since

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un reached out to Seoul and Washington early this year with a vague commitment to nuclear disarmamen­t. The fast-improving inter-Korean ties have raised worries among many in South Korea and the United States as global diplomacy on the North’s nuclear weapons program has produced little recent progress.

Speaking in Washington on Thursday, South Korean Unificatio­n Minister Cho Myoung-gyon acknowledg­ed that criticism and offered reassuranc­e that the South would not pursue economic co-operation with the North until there’s “significan­t progress” on denucleari­zation.

But he argued that improving inter-Korean relation would help, not hinder that process. He said another summit between South and North Korea could still take place this year. If it happens, Cho said it would break a “glass ceiling” in inter-Korean relations and could pave the way for another U.S.-North Korea summit.

“Chairman Kim’s visit to Seoul and South Korea is something that we have agreed upon, something that we can implement and something that is possible,” Cho said at the Wilson Center thinktank.

The two Korean leaders have already met three times this year, most recently in North Korea’s capital. But a lack of progress in U.S.-led efforts to get the North to give up its nukes has added to doubts about whether plans for South Korean President Moon Jae-in to host Kim in the South Korean capital can be realized.

 ?? POOL GETTY IMAGES ?? A South Korean soldier stands guard as constructi­on equipment destroys a guard post in the Demilitari­zed Zone. The two Koreas began destroying guard posts under a plan to reduce tensions on the border.
POOL GETTY IMAGES A South Korean soldier stands guard as constructi­on equipment destroys a guard post in the Demilitari­zed Zone. The two Koreas began destroying guard posts under a plan to reduce tensions on the border.

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