The North today delivered its agreement to talk in Panmunjom through a Red Cross line restored a day earlier, Seoul's Unification Ministry said in a text message. Pyongyang had earlier favoured its border city of Kaesong, which contains the industrial park emptied in May after tensions peaked.
Representatives of the rival Koreas met on the peninsula in February 2011 and their nuclear envoys met in Beijing later that year, but government officials from both sides have not met since. Tomorrow's meeting would be clearest sign of eased tensions since Pyongyang threatened to attack South Korea and the United States with nuclear missiles earlier this year, and the South made counter-threats.
The talks between the Koreas tomorrow could represent a change in North Korea's approach, analysts said, or could simply be an effort to ease international demands that it end its development of nuclear weapons, a topic crucial to Washington but initially not a part of the envisioned inter-Korean meetings.
The Unification Ministry, which handles cross-border relations, said the talks at Panmunjom are aimed at setting up higher-level talks. No other details on possible topics were released.
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Pyongyang requested a lower-level meeting first, citing mistrust between the sides and a lack of dialogue over the years. The countries' top officials in charge of cross-border relations last met in 2007.
Other items to be discussed when the Koreas hold ministerial talks include stalled South Korean cross-border tours to a North Korean mountain and the reunions of families separated by war.