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SKorea urges talks with NKorea on restarting tours
Posted: 17 August 2009 1402 hrs

  A tour guide (R) explains about pictures of North Korean leader Kim Jong Il at a unification observation post near the border village of Panmunjom, the demilitarized zone
 
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North Korea agrees to resume inter-Korean tours, family reunions


SEOUL: South Korea Monday cautiously welcomed North Korea's decision to lift border restrictions and restart tours to the communist state, but said the two governments must hold talks before trips can resume.

The government "positively evaluates" the joint statement by Pyongyang and Seoul's Hyundai Group on restarting tours and family reunions, said unification ministry spokesman Chun Hae-Sung.

But he added: "This is an agreement reached at a civilian level. We need concrete accords to be worked out through talks between the authorities of the two Koreas to implement this agreement.

"The government will make active efforts to reach the accords between the authorities... as early as possible."

North Korea is bitterly hostile to South Korea's conservative government and has cut virtually all official contacts.

A Hyundai subsidiary runs all inter-Korean tourism and business projects.

The North disclosed the agreement to resume tours and lift border restrictions earlier Monday, one day after a meeting in Pyongyang between its leader Kim Jong-Il and Hyundai chairwoman Hyun Jung-Eun.

It said tours to the scenic Mount Kumgang resort on the east coast and to Kaesong, a historic city near the west coast, would resume as soon as possible.

Spokesman Chun said the government would try to resume inter-Korean Red Cross talks as soon as possible so family reunions can go ahead.

Seoul suspended tours to Kumgang after North Korean soldiers in July 2008 shot dead a South Korean housewife who strayed into a military zone.

Pyongyang in December halted day trips to Kaesong and limited access to a joint industrial estate there as ties worsened.

Chun repeated Seoul's demand that Pyongyang allow a joint investigation of the killing at Kumgang.

Hyundai chief Hyun said on her return Monday afternoon she did not consult the Seoul government before her trip.

She said the shooting case was raised during her four-hour meeting with Kim at Mount Myohyang, a resort northeast of Pyongyang, on Sunday.

"Chairman Kim said that there would never be such a thing in the future," Hyun said.

Hyun also indicated that four crewmen on a South Korean fishing boat, detained on July 30 after an accidental border crossing, could also be freed.

"(Chairman Kim) said there should be talks with... the authorities concerned. I believe everything will go well," she said.

- AFP/yb

 


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