South Korea has offered to hold talks with North Korea to ease animosities along their tense border and resume reunions of families separated by their war in the 1950s.
“We request military talks with the North on July 21 at Tongilgak to stop all hostile activities that raise military tension at the military demarcation line,” Suh Choo-suk, South Korea’s vice defence minister, told a media briefing on Monday.
South Korea’s proposal for two sets of talks indicates new President Moon Jae-in is pushing to improve ties with North Korea, despite the North’s first intercontinental ballistic missile test earlier this month.
READ MORE: Who is Moon Jae-in, South Korea’s new president?
Tongilgak is a North Korean building at the Panmunjom truce village on the border used for previous inter-Korea talks. The last government-level talks were held in December 2015.
The proposal came roughly a week after Moon had said the need for dialogue with North Korea was more pressing than ever to curb North Korea’s nuclear and missile programmes.
The vice defence minister did not elaborate on the meaning of hostile military activities, which are viewed differently by the two Koreas. South Korea usually refers to loudspeaker broadcasts and other provocations, while North Korea wants a halt to routine joint US-South Korea military drills.
Moon has suggested hostile military activities be halted at the inter-Korean border on July 27, the anniversary of the 1953 armistice agreement that ended the Korean War.
Talks on family reunions
South Korea’s Red Cross says it wants separate talks at the border village on August 1 to discuss family reunions, with possible reunions over the Chuseok holiday, which falls in October this year.
North Korea’s state media has not immediately responded to South Korea’s latest overtures.
Previously, North Korea has repeatedly said it refuses to engage in talks unless South Korea turns over 12 waitresses who defected to the South last year.
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