Resume Joint Projects With SKorea, NKorea Agree

August 17, 2009 by  
Filed under World News

a52d66bf0dagree Resume Joint Projects With SKorea,  NKorea AgreeSEOUL: North Korea announced on Monday that it would resume reunions of families separated by the border with South Korea and restart stalled tourism ventures in its latest gesture of conciliation after nearly 18 months of rising tensions.

The North, however, said separately it was putting its army on “special alert” because of South Korea’s joint military drills with the United States this week, a sign that hostility and distrust between the rival countries remain high.

The official Korean Central News Agency said in a dispatch early Monday that it agreed to restart tours to the scenic Diamond Mountain resort and ancient sights in Kaesong in the North. The tours had been suspended amid rising tensions that followed the inauguration of South Korean President Lee Myung-bak in Seoul early last year.

The conservative Lee angered Pyongyang by taking a tougher line than his predecessors on keeping North Korea accountable to its commitments on nuclear disarmament.

The report did not give exact dates for when the tours would resume, but said it would be soon.

KCNA said the North also agreed to resume reunions of families separated by one of the world’s most heavily fortified borders at Diamond Mountain on this year’s annual “Chuseok” autumn harvest holiday Oct.3. Chuseok is one of the two biggest Korean traditional holidays celebrated in both Koreas and is equivalent to Thanksgiving in the United States.

The North also said it agreed to ease restriction on border traffic and “energize” the operation of a joint factory park in Kaesong — the last remaining key joint project between the Koreas. The future of the industrial complex was thrown into doubt after the North significantly restricted border crossings and demanded a massive increase in rent and salaries for North Korean workers at the complex.

The North said the agreement was reached with Seoul’s Hyundai Group, the main South Korean investor in North Korea and followed a meeting between Hyundai Chairwoman Hyun Jung-eun and North Korean leader Kim Jong Il in Pyongyang on Sunday.

Both tours to Diamond Mountain and Kaesong had been run by Hyundai’s North Korea business arm, Hyundai Asan.

Kim had “a cordial talk with Hyun” and “complied with all her requests,” according to the KCNA report.

Hyundai Asan in Seoul said it was aware of the North’s announcement but couldn’t immediately confirm it.

South Korea’s Unification Ministry said it would disclose its position on whether to accept the North’s announcements after Hyun returns home later Monday and it obtains details on the agreement from her.

Ministry Spokeswoman Lee Jong-joo also said government-level talks between the two Koreas were necessary to resume some of the stalled projects such as the Diamond Mountain tours and family reunions.

South Korea suspended tours to the mountain resort after a North Korean soldier fatally shot a South Korean tourist, who allegedly entered a restricted military area next to the resort, in July last year. South Korea called for a joint investigation but the North refused.

The North’s announcement Monday was seen as a conciliatory gesture toward Seoul and Washington amid the standoff over its nuclear weapons program and comes after the resolution last week of a major thorn in relations.

On Thursday, the North freed a Hyundai worker whom it had detained for months for allegedly denouncing the communist country’s political system. Pyongyang accused the employee of denouncing North Korea’s government. His return home followed by about a week the North’s release of two jailed U.S. journalists after former President Bill Clinton made a surprise trip to Pyongyang.

Meanwhile, the North said Monday that its military will be on guard over South Korea’s annual computer-simulated war games with the U.S. that started Monday.

The Supreme Command of the (North) Korean People’s Army said in a statement that its troops and the entire nation would go on “special alert” starting Monday, calling the drills “a blatant challenge and grave threat” to peace on the Korean peninsula.

The statement, carried by KCNA, said the North would retaliate mercilessly at the “slightest military provocation” from South Korea and the U.S.

The North sees the exercises as preparation for an invasion, but the U.S. and South Korea say the maneuvers are purely defensive.

French Researcher Released By Iranian Authorties

August 17, 2009 by  
Filed under World News

dae2504385orties French Researcher Released By Iranian AuthortiesPARIS: Iranian authorities released a young French academic who was accused of spying on bail, the French presidency announced, after she spent six weeks in Tehran’s notorious Evin jail.

University teaching assistant Clotilde Reiss, 24, was arrested in Tehran on July 1 after taking part in post-election street protests.

She will now have to stay at the French embassy in Tehran while she awaits the verdict in her trial, which was heard on August 8. Her father Remi Reiss said the young academic was “very happy” after being freed and seemed well.

Earthquake Jolts Shuffles Southern Japan And Taiwan

August 17, 2009 by  
Filed under World News

f586c09c4dtaiwan Earthquake Jolts Shuffles Southern Japan And TaiwanTOKYO: A strong earthquake jolted the ocean floor off southern Japan on Monday, triggering a brief tsunami warning for a cluster of tropical islands and shaking buildings in nearby Taiwan.

The 6.7-magnitude quake struck at around 9:06 am (0006 GMT) 115 kilometers (70 miles) southwest of Ishigaki-jima island in Japan’s far south at a depth of 10 kilometres (six miles), the US Geological Survey reported.

Japan’s meteorological agency, which measured the tremor at magnitude 6.8, issued a warning for tsunami waves of up to 50 centimetres (20 inches) for a group of islands in the East China Sea, but later lifted the alert.

There were no immediate reports of casualties or damage in Japan or Taiwan from the quake, which rattled buildings in Taipei and on Ishigaki-jima.

“We have no reports of damage for now,” said a fire official on Ishigaki-jima. “But we sent patrol vehicles to inform local residents and to survey the island.”

“We felt strong shaking, but not enough to throw things off shelves,” he said. “I see no changes in the ocean level.”

Around 20 percent of the world’s most powerful earthquakes strike Japan, which is located at the intersection of several tectonic plates.

An earthquake of magnitude 6.4 struck central Japan last Tuesday, killing one woman and injuring more than 120 people.


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