The Borneo Post

Two Koreas squabble over defections, talks offer

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SEOUL: The two Koreas stepped up an angry war of words yesterday as tensions mounted over a series of North Korean defections and the South’s rejection of Pyongyang’s repeated offers of military talks.

Tensions have been running high on the divided Korean peninsula ever since the North conducted its fourth nuclear test in January followed by a longrange rocket launch.

In the past month, a new source of friction has emerged with two cases of group defections by North Korean staff working in Pyongyang-run restaurant­s in China.

A dozen women and their restaurant manager arrived in Seoul in April, and three others from a separate restaurant followed them this week.

North Korea insists the staff were duped and effectivel­y kidnapped by South Korean intelligen­ce agents and are being held in the South against their will — an accusation Seoul categorica­lly denies.

“The allurement and abduction clearly proves that the puppet forces of south Korea are the most hideous human rights abusers,” a spokesman for the North Korean Red Cross said in a statement.

Referring to the latest case of the three women who had been working in a restaurant in the northern Chinese province of Shanxi, the spokesman said they were the victims of a sophistica­ted, ‘ premeditat­ed abduction’.

He said South Korean agents ‘lured’ the women away from their work and spirited them across the border with Laos and then into Thailand.

Seoul’s unificatio­n ministry dismissed the ‘groundless’ accusation­s yesterday, and said North Korea could better spend time examining why its citizens wanted to flee.

“We hope North Korea will look back on the continued defections and use it as an opportunit­y to improve the human rights and livelihood­s of its people,” ministry spokesman Jeong Joon-Hee said.

The South Korean government estimates that Pyongyang rakes in around $ 10 million every year from about 130 restaurant­s it operates — with mostly North Korean staff — in 12 countries, including neighbouri­ng China. — AFP

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