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Koreas hold fresh Kaesong talks as military drill looms

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AFP Seoul
The two Koreas held fresh talks today on reopening a joint industrial estate, ahead of South Korea-US military exercises next week that the North says are a rehearsal for war.

The two sides have already met for six rounds of fruitless discussions on the future of the estate in Kaesong, which was effectively shut down by North Korea in April as military tensions soared on the divided peninsula.

With South Korea starting an annual military drill with the United States on Monday, the result of the latest negotiations could determine whether the peninsula is sucked into another dangerous cycle of escalating hostilities.
 

"The fact we are sitting here for the seventh round shows that the issue is not an easy one to solve," the South's chief delegate Kim Ki-Woong told his North Korean counterpart Pak Chol-Su as the talks began in Kaesong, 10 kilometres inside the North Korean border.

Pak likened the negotiations to farming and said the recent break in an extended heatwave on the peninsula boded well.

"With the weather so good, I think we can tend the field well and can possibly reap good produce," Pak said, according to a pool report.

An association representing the owners of the 123 South Korean companies in Kaesong said yesterday that the time had come to make a lasting deal on resuming operations.

"This time, our government and the North's authorities must reach agreement on reopening Kaesong without fail," it said in a statement.

The North had proposed the seventh round of talks last week, just hours after Seoul announced it was going to start compensation payments totalling USD 250 million to businesses impacted by Kaesong's closure.

The payout move was widely seen as the first step towards a permanent withdrawal from the zone.

Established in 2004 as a rare symbol of inter-Korean cooperation, Kaesong was a key hard-currency earner for the North and the decision to shut it down took many observers by surprise.

The project had managed to ride out previous North-South crises without serious disruption, but it eventually fell victim to an extended period of heightened tension following the North's third nuclear test in February.

Pyongyang initially barred access to the park, then withdrew its 53,000-strong workforce from the South Korean firms.

Today's talks will be dominated by the same issue that deadlocked the previous six rounds: South Korea's demand that the North provide a binding guarantee not to close Kaesong again in the future.

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First Published: Aug 14 2013 | 1:59 PM IST

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