South Korea will determine the fate of its industrial park in North Korea
“at some point” and the decision will depend on the communist regime’s
attitude toward the troubled facilities, a senior Seoul official said.
“There will be a judgment at some point on whether the Kaesong Industrial
Complex can be maintained or not,” the official at the Unification Ministry,
which handles inter-Korean affairs, told reporters last Friday on condition
of anonymity. The South’s government will take related measures based on how the North responds, he said.
The future of the industrial town, just north of the heavily armed border
between the two Koreas, has been thrown into question as military tensions
skyrocket on the peninsula. The South ditched all inter-Korean exchanges
except for the Kaesong project in retaliation for the North’s apparent attack
on a South Korean warship in March.
A North Korean submarine sneaked into the southern waters and torpedoed the 1,200-ton patrol ship the Cheonan, killing 46 sailors, according to an international investigation. Seoul has asked the UN Security Council to discuss penalties against Pyongyang although it denies involvement in the naval disaster.
South Korea also banned local firms from expanding investment in the
industrial park, which was created in 2004 during a period of reconciliation
between the two sides after a historic summit between their leaders four
years before. Once hailed as a symbol of inter-Korean rapprochement and
model for economic cooperation between the capitalist South and the
communist North, the Kaesong complex has become a thorn in the side of
South Korean officials. More than 120 small and mid-sized South Korean
manufacturing firms operate there, and closing the complex will cause huge
financial damage to them.
The North, upset by Seoul’s punitive measures, expelled South Korean
government officials from the industrial zone and threatened to wage war
ifit is sanctioned for the incident.
Pyongyang, however, stopped short of taking extreme measures such as
shutting down the facilities, a rare stable source of money for the cash-
strapped regime.
The South Korean official stressed the importance of the safety of hundreds
of South Korean workers there.
“When it comes to security of our nationals staying at the Kaesong
Industrial Complex, the normal situation is that they can go in and out of it
as they want,” he said.
He added the North holds the key to putting inter-Korean ties back on the
normal track.
“South-North relations will move forward only when North Korea offers an
apology for the Cheonan incident, punishes those responsible for it and
promises measures to prevent any recurrence,” he said.
He said the government is not yet considering additional actions against
North Korea.
The official said the government is paying heed to the North’s plan to hold
another session of the Supreme People’s Assembly (SPA) this week.
The North’s parliament had its previous meeting just two months ago.
“It is very unusual” to hold two meetings to close together, the official said.
“In that sense, we are paying attention and keeping close tabs (on the
event).”
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