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November 6, 2012

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South Korea's Park pledges engagement with Pyongyang

SOUTH Korea's presidential frontrunner Park Geun-hye proposed yesterday to open liaison offices in the capitals of the rival Koreas in a sweeping policy statement that aimed to revive ties between the two countries.

Park, who represents the conservative New Frontier Party and is seeking to become the country's first woman president, said she was willing to meet North Korea's leader but said Pyongyang must renew its commitment to end its nuclear program.

Park, who is the daughter of assassinated leader Park Chung-hee, leads her two major liberal opponents by double digits in a race for the December 19 vote to pick South Korea's president for a single five-year term.

Park's call for a more accommodative policy toward North Korea is aimed at distancing herself from President Lee Myung-bak's hardline position.

The two Koreas remain technically at war after an armistice rather than a peace treaty ended the 1950-53 Korean War. North Korea under its new leader Kim Jong-un has resumed verbal attacks on Lee's government and on Park.

Pyongyang is widely seen as favoring the liberal opposition's Moon Jae-in, who has pledged unconditional aid for North Korea.

"For continued and systematic development of South-North economic cooperation and social and cultural exchange, I will establish South-North exchange and cooperation offices in Seoul and Pyongyang," Park told a news conference.

The proposal for liaison offices dates back to the early 1990s before the leaders of the two countries met for the first time in 2000.

Park yesterday called for a confidence building process as a way to normalize ties between the two Koreas, adding it should begin with the two sides reaffirming existing agreements.

"In order to build confidence, there must be various channels of dialogue. I will meet with the leader of North Korea if that is needed for the development of South-North relationship," she said.

Offering a different policy approach to Lee, Park also said she would separate the humanitarian crisis in North Korea from politics.

Lee, who cut off aid to North Korea when he took power in 2008, has linked a resumption of food aid to a political thaw.

North Korea experienced a devastating famine in the 1990s from which its economy has not recovered, and a third of its population is malnourished, according to UN estimates.

The country needs about 5 million tons of grain and potatoes to feed its people and since the early 1990s its annual harvest has been 3.5-4.7 million tons, according to most observers.





 

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