N. Korea rejects dialogue with South

Agence France-Presse

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North Korea rejects South Korea's offer to open formal talks on restarting operations at Kaesong

OFFER REJECTED. North Korea rejected South Korea's offer to open formal talks on restarting operations at the Kaesong joint industrial zone

SEOUL, South Korea – North Korea has rejected South Korea’s offer to open formal talks on restarting operations at the Kaesong joint industrial zone, Yonhap news agency said Friday, citing the North’s National Defence Commission.

Seoul on Thursday had given the North 24 hours to agree to formal negotiations on the Kaesong complex, warning of unspecified “significant measures” if Pyongyang declined.

“If the South Korean puppet force continues to aggravate the situation, it would be up to us to take any final and decisive grave measures,” Yonhap cited the defence commission statement as saying.

The South’s ultimatum had been seen as a thinly veiled threat of a permanent withdrawal from Kaesong, which normally employs 53,000 workers at 123 South Korean firms.

The industrial zone, located about 10 kilometres (six miles) inside the North, was seen as a rare example of cooperation across the heavily militarised border.

But Pyongyang pulled out its entire workforce on April 9 and suspended operations, angered by the South’s mention of a “military” contingency plan to protect its staff at the site.

The South Korean firms that usually operate at the complex have vowed to remain and fight to defend their investment whatever Seoul’s decision.

“We’ve decided to protect Kaesong Industrial Complex no matter what difficulties we may face,” a spokesman for the South Korean companies, Ok Sung-Seok, told journalists.

The Korean peninsula was already engulfed in a cycle of escalating tensions — triggered by the North’s nuclear test in February — when Pyongyang decided on April 3 to block all South Korean access to Kaesong.

Established in 2004, Kaesong is a crucial hard currency source for the impoverished North, through taxes and revenues, and from its cut of worker wages.

The project was born out of the “Sunshine Policy” of inter-Korean conciliation initiated in the late 1990s by South Korean President Kim Dae-Jung.

It operates as a collaborative economic development zone that hosts South Korean companies attracted by its source of cheap, educated, skilled labour, with turnover in 2012 reported at $469.5 million. – Rappler.com

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