Two Koreas start fresh talks on joint Kaesong industrial site
North and South Korea started talks on Wednesday on reopening a jointly run industrial zone, Seoul’s Unification Ministry said, with the complex seen as the last remaining symbol of cross-border reconciliation.
South Korean delegates met their Pyongyang counterparts in North Korea for the sensitive meeting aimed at restarting the site’s mothballed factories, but the two sides remain far apart over who was to blame for the closure.
The fresh talks follow a rare weekend meeting in which the two nations agreed in principle to reopen the Kaesong industrial complex, which shut down three months ago as relations between the frosty neighbours hit crisis point.
“We’ll do our best to ensure this meeting will lead to restoration of mutual trust and larger cooperation,” South Korea’s chief delegate Suh Ho told journalists before departure.
The South wants firm safeguards from the North against shutting Kaesong down unilaterally and to keep the estate insulated from Pyongyang’s whims.
This would be a bitter pill for the North to swallow as it means it would accept full responsibility for April’s closure of the zone.