International

Koreas agree to resume talks

North Korea unusually conciliatory in move that revives hope for resumption of production at Kaesong complex

South Korea on Wednesday agreed to hold a new round of talks with the North on the shuttered Kaesong joint industrial zone after Pyongyang offered fresh proposals for reopening the complex.

North Korea vowed to reopen the troubled zone, which it jointly runs with the South, just minutes after Seoul signaled its willingness to let it close for good.

"We accept the North's proposal for a meeting on Aug. 14," said Unification Ministry spokesman Kim Hyung-Suk, who described the North's latest offer as "forward-looking."

The North's Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea, which handles Pyongyang's ties with Seoul, proposed talks aimed at normalizing the project and said, in unusually conciliatory comments, the safety of South Koreans visiting the factory park would be guaranteed.

The committee said it was "prompted by its desire to bring about a new phase of reconciliation, cooperation, peace, reunification and prosperity by normalizing operation in the Kaesong zone."

The comments were carried by the North's official KCNA news agency about 90 minutes after South Korea announced steps to compensate its firms that operate factories in Kaesong for losses -- a step widely seen as a move toward shutting down the rivals' last symbol of cooperation.

'Final offer'

The decision to pay 109 South Korean small- and medium-sized manufacturers from a government insurance fund came after the North went for 10 days without responding to what Seoul said was its "final offer" for talks aimed at reopening the project.

South Korea had said it would not wait forever.

"There has been a cause that allows for the payment, which is the suspension of the Kaesong industrial zone, a suspension due to the North's unilateral actions," South Korean Unification Ministry spokesman Kim Hyung Suk said earlier.

These latest interactions regarding the complex are seen as the toughest talks since the Kaesong crisis started four months ago in the wake of fresh sanctions on North after it conducted nuclear test.

Impoverished and reclusive North Korea -- for which Kaesong has been a rare source of hard currency -- and the South, one of the richest countries in the world, are technically still at war as their 1950-53 civil conflict ended not in a treaty but in a truce.

Al Jazeera and wire services

Related News

Places
South Korea

Find Al Jazeera America on your TV

Get email updates from Al Jazeera America

Sign up for our weekly newsletter

Related

Places
South Korea

Get email updates from Al Jazeera America

Sign up for our weekly newsletter