Thursday, June 24, 2010

More North workers at Kaesong

Despite tension over the sinking of a South Korean warship, the number of
North Korean workers at the two countries’ joint industrial complex has
reached the highest point since it opened in 2004, a government report
said yesterday.
The number stood at 44,000 as of June, 2,000 more than in January, the
Unification Ministry said in a parliamentary report, adding that 121 South
Korean firms are operating in the communist country’s border town of
Kaesong near the west coast.
The report suggests the factory park, considered the last remaining major
symbol of reconciliation, is growing despite South Korean measures aimed
at punishing the North for the Cheonan sinkig in March. Forty-six sailors
died in the attack.
North Korea denies that it played any role in the tragedy, but a multinational investigation pinpointed Pyongyang as the aggressor. Seoul banned cross-border trade late last month, and scaled down the number of South Koreans permitted to stay each day in Kaesong.
Last week, South Korean firms operating in Kaesong said they were seeking
rescue funds from the government because their businesses had deteriorated amid cross-border tensions. The complex opened in 2004 after the two sides’ leaders sides agreed on the venture in a summit in 2000.
http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/print.asp

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