Rival Koreas Meet Again at Border


Rival Koreas Meet Again at Border

TEHRAN (Tasnim) - South and North Korean officials have sat down for a second round of talks at a border village as the North's call for a delay of annual South Korea-US military drills threatens plans for the resumption of reunions of war-divided families.

The talks that started on Friday have no fixed agenda and   the first round   on Wednesday ended without any tangible progress.

Seoul wants Pyongyang to guarantee that planned reunions for relatives divided by the 1950-53 Korean War will take place as scheduled at the North's Mount Kumgang resort from February 20 - 25.

North Korea, for its part, is insisting that its neighbour must postpone the start of its annual military drills with the US, scheduled for February 24, until after the reunions are over.

The spat has provoked worries that Pyongyang may cancel any family reunions that overlap with the first two days of the military drills, AP reported.

North Korea calls the military exercises a rehearsal for invasion, while South Korea and the US say they are defensive in nature.

A year after dramatically raising tension with repeated threats of nuclear wars and vows to bolster nuclear capability, the North has recently pushed for better ties with Seoul, Al Jazeera reported.

The talks are the highest level between the rival countries in seven years and the first substantive follow-up to statements made by the leaders of both countries expressing a desire for improved ties.

The North has refused to discuss nuclear issues in the talks, according to South Korea’s Unification Ministry.

Pyongyang has so far concluded three nuclear tests and launching rockets into orbit - a move widely seen by its critics as cover for testing ballistic missile technology to carry nuclear weapons.

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