North Korea pulls out of inter-Korean liaison office
SEOUL: North Korea pulled its staff out of an inter-Korean liaison office yesterday, Seoul said, weeks after leader Kim Jong Un’s summit with US President Donald Trump ended without agreement.
The office in the Northern city of Kaesong was opened in September as the two Koreas knitted closer ties, but the South’s vice unification minister Chun Haesung told reporters Pyongyang had “notified the South they are pulling out of the liaison office’.
The decision had been taken “in accordance with an order from an upper command”, he said, adding: “They said they didn’t care whether we stayed at the liaison office or not.”
The South’s President Moon Jaein was instrumental in brokering talks between the nucleararmed, sanctions-hit North and Washington.
Moon has long backed engagementwiththeNorthtobring it to the negotiating table, and has been pushing the carrot of interKorean development projects, among them the restarting of an industrial zone also in Kaesong and lucrative cross-border tourist visits by Southerners to the North’s picturesque Mount Kumgang.
But the sanctions currently in place effectively block their resumption, while a preliminary study for a plan to renovate the North’s decrepit rail system was repeatedly delayed.
Questions were even raised over whether supplies provided to set up the liaison office were a sanctions violation.
The failure by Kim and Trump to reach agreement in Hanoi last month on walking back Pyongyang’s nuclear programme in exchange for relaxation of the measures against it has raised questions over the future of the wider process.
In Vietnam both sides expressed willingness to talk further, but it has since emerged that Washington presented Kim with a wider definition of what it regards as denuclearisation.
A senior Pyongyang diplomat told reporters last week that the North was considering suspending nuclear talks with the US.
Analysts said yesterday’s decision could be a sign Pyongyang felt Seoul was unable to exert sufficient influence on Washington.
“With the pull-out, the North is pressuring the South to do more as a middle man between Pyongyang and Washington after it didn’t get the resumption of the Kaesong industrial complex and Mount Kumgang tours,” said Yoo Ho-yeol, professor of North Korean studies at Korea University.
“It could be seen as either pressure, or a warning,” he told AFP. “Internally, Pyongyang could use the withdrawal as a propaganda message to its people that it is taking a lead when it comes to inter-Korean relations.”
The North has recently summoned several of its top diplomats around the world back to Pyongyang.
Cheong Seong-chang, a senior researcher at the private Sejong Institute, said that move and yesterday’s pull-out could signal “that the North is considering a shift in denuclearisation strategy and foreign policy”.
It was “hard to rule out a hardline statement”, he added.
In his New Year speech, Kim said without giving details that Pyongyang might see a “new way for defending the sovereignty of the country and the supreme interests of the state” if the US persisted with sanctions.