The Asian Age

South Korea offers to hold rare military talks with North Korea

It will be first official inter-Korea talks since 2015

- Border crisis

Seoul, July 17: South Korea on Monday offered to hold rare military talks with North Korea, aiming to ease tensions after Pyongyang tested its first interconti­nental ballistic missile.

The offer of talks, the first since South Korea elected dovish President Moon Jae-In, came as the Red Cross in Seoul proposed a separate meeting to discuss reunions of families separated by the 1950-53 Korean War.

The South’s defence ministry proposed a meeting to be held on Friday at the border truce village of Panmunjom, while the Red Cross offered to hold talks on August 1 at the same venue.

If the government meeting goes ahead, it will mark the first official inter-Korea talks since December 2015.

Mr Moon’s conservati­ve predecesso­r Park GeunHye had refused to engage in substantiv­e dialogue with Pyongyang unless it made a firm commitment to denucleari­sation.

“We make the proposal for a meeting... aimed at stopping all hostile activities that escalate military tension along the land border,” the defence ministry said in a statement.

The Red Cross said it hoped for “a positive response” from its counterpar­t in the North in hopes of holding family reunions in early October.

If realised, they would be the first for two years. Millions of family members were separated by the conflict that sealed the division of the two countries. Many died without getting a chance to see or hear from their families.

With the passage of time, the number of survivors has diminished, with only around 60,000 members of divided families still left in the South.

“North Korea should respond to our sincere proposals if it really seeks peace on the Korean Peninsula”, Cho

Myoung-Gyon, Seoul’s unificatio­n minister in charge of North Korea affairs, said.

Cho stressed that Seoul “would not seek collapse of the North or unificatio­n through absorbing the North”, and urged Pyongyang to restore cross-border communicat­ion channels including a shuttered military hotline. —

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