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Seoul softens stance on N Korea | |
(about 4 hours later) | |
South Korea's President, Lee Myung-bak, has proposed reviving direct talks with North Korea, in a major policy shift. | |
Mr Lee told parliament he was willing to carry out previous bilateral summit accords and provide the impoverished North with food aid. | |
The apparent softening of Mr Lee's hardline stance was marred by news that a South Korean woman had been shot dead while on a tourist trip to the North. | |
It also came on day two of six-party talks on North Korea in Beijing. | |
The negotiations - which include representatives from the US, China, Russia and Japan as well as the two Koreas - are seeking to agree ways the North's recent declaration of its nuclear activities can be verified. | |
Correspondents say President Lee's previous hardline stance towards the South's communist northern neighbour had left Seoul sidelined in these talks. | |
The president has also been buffeted by protests and crises at home, and has seen his approval ratings decline steeply in the five months of his term. | |
Softer stance | Softer stance |
"Full dialogue between the two Koreas must resume," the president told the National Assembly in Seoul, which is finally convening after weeks of delay amid a domestic political crisis over US beef imports. | "Full dialogue between the two Koreas must resume," the president told the National Assembly in Seoul, which is finally convening after weeks of delay amid a domestic political crisis over US beef imports. |
He said his government was "willing to engage in serious consultations on how to implement the inter-Korean agreements made so far", including summit pacts reached by his predecessors in 2000 and 2007. | He said his government was "willing to engage in serious consultations on how to implement the inter-Korean agreements made so far", including summit pacts reached by his predecessors in 2000 and 2007. |
Mr Lee, who took office in February, drew accusations from the North that he was a "traitor" and US "sycophant" when he turned away from the Sunshine Policy of engagement of past presidents. | Mr Lee, who took office in February, drew accusations from the North that he was a "traitor" and US "sycophant" when he turned away from the Sunshine Policy of engagement of past presidents. |
He caused Pyongyang to bristle when he suggested Seoul would review previous summit accords signed by the North Korean leader Kim Jong-il, correspondents say, and the North cut off dialogue. | |
Beijing talks | |
On Friday the president also appeared to backtrack on earlier pledges to link the provision of economic aid to North Korea to progress on the nuclear issue. | |
Long-running talks on the North's nuclear programme have restarted | |
Seoul "is ready to co-operate in efforts to help relieve the food shortage in the North as well as alleviate the pain of the North Korean people", he said. | |
Meanwhile, multilateral talks continued in Beijing on North Korea's nuclear programme. | |
The talks began again on Thursday, after the North finally submitted an account of its nuclear activities following months of delay. | |
US negotiator Christopher Hill said Thursday's discussions of steps required to verify the information North Korea has submitted had got off to a "good start". | |
Discussions will also include delivering the energy aid promised to the North in response to its co-operation on the nuclear front, officials said. The North complains it has received only 40% of the total aid agreed. | |
Lee's woes | |
In Seoul, President Lee's new pledges came as parliament finally convened, after a weeks-long boycott by opposition deputies which paralysed Mr Lee's legislative programme. | |
During the session, Mr Lee said he would press ahead with his agenda, and submit "about 200 bills concerning deregulation". | |
Mr Lee's decision in April to reopen South Korea to US beef imports - banned in 2003 after the discovery of mad cow disease in American cattle - prompted near-daily protests and has dominated the domestic political agenda. | |
However, correspondents say Mr Lee's plans to deregulate the economy, introduce tax cuts and reforms pension systems could also meet significant opposition. |