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South and North Korea Resume Talks on Reopening Factory Complex | South and North Korea Resume Talks on Reopening Factory Complex |
(about 7 hours later) | |
SEOUL, South Korea — South Korea and North Korea resumed talks Monday but failed again to reach an agreement on reopening a jointly operated industrial park in the North, a symbol of inter-Korean economic cooperation that has been shuttered for more than three months. | |
The factory park in the North Korean border town of Kaesong, where Monday’s talks were being held, was idled in early April, when North Korea withdrew all of its 53,000 workers, blaming tensions it said were caused by American-South Korean military drills. The South later pulled out all of its own personnel, most of them factory managers. | |
Both sides agree that whether they can strike a deal on reopening the factory park will have far-reaching implications for broader relations between the Koreas, which soured earlier this year as the two sides exchanged threats of attack and counterattack. In two rounds of talks earlier this month, they differed widely on conditions for resuming operations at Kaesong, a gap they failed to narrow during their third round of negotiations on Monday. | |
The two sides will meet again in Kaesong on Wednesday, said Kim Ki-woong, the chief South Korean negotiator. | |
South Korea demanded that the North take responsibility for the damage caused by the shuttering of the industrial zone and that it take steps to ensure that nothing similar happens again. The North bristled at those demands, blaming Seoul for the closing of the Kaesong complex and accusing it of abusing inter-Korean dialogue to escalate tensions. | |
Since last Wednesday, the North, which wants an early reopening of the complex, has allowed South Korean factory managers to return to Kaesong to check on the plants’ long-idled equipment and retrieve hundreds of tons of finished goods and other materials. | |
The South’s conservative government appears determined to use the Kaesong talks to set new rules in inter-Korean relations. President Park Geun-hye has said that if the South appeased the North by ignoring its provocative behavior, the "vicious cycle" would only continue. | The South’s conservative government appears determined to use the Kaesong talks to set new rules in inter-Korean relations. President Park Geun-hye has said that if the South appeased the North by ignoring its provocative behavior, the "vicious cycle" would only continue. |
Mr. Kim, the chief South Korean delegate, said his government wanted to turn Kaesong into an “internationalized” factory park. By inviting foreign investors, South Korean policy makers said, they hoped to help North Korea become more responsible for honoring “international standards" in business. But the North rejected the idea as a plot to spread outside influence within the country, where the totalitarian regime strives to keep its people isolated from the rest of the world. | |
North Korea last week proposed talks on reuniting families who have been separated for decades by the division of the Korean Peninsula, but it later withdrew the offer, after the South rejected a separate offer from Pyongyang to discuss resuming South Korean tours to a North Korean mountain. Both sides agreed to focus on the Kaesong issue. | North Korea last week proposed talks on reuniting families who have been separated for decades by the division of the Korean Peninsula, but it later withdrew the offer, after the South rejected a separate offer from Pyongyang to discuss resuming South Korean tours to a North Korean mountain. Both sides agreed to focus on the Kaesong issue. |
The Kaesong complex, pairing South Korean manufacturing know-how and capital with low-cost North Korean labor, was the last of a handful of cross-border projects that were launched during an earlier period of rapprochement but halted in recent years as relations soured. Since beginning operations in late 2004, annual production had risen to $470 million last year. | The Kaesong complex, pairing South Korean manufacturing know-how and capital with low-cost North Korean labor, was the last of a handful of cross-border projects that were launched during an earlier period of rapprochement but halted in recent years as relations soured. Since beginning operations in late 2004, annual production had risen to $470 million last year. |