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NUKEWARS
South Korean businessmen rally for reopening of Kaesong
by Staff Writers
Paju, South Korea (AFP) Aug 07, 2013


N. Korea says Japan has crossed military 'danger line'
Seoul (AFP) Aug 07, 2013 - A day after Japan unveiled its largest warship since World War II, North Korea warned on Wednesday that Tokyo was following a militarisation programme that had already crossed "the danger line".

A commentary by the official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) highlighted a Japanese Defence Ministry paper published last month that stressed the need to boost the strength and range of forces required to protect Japan's far-flung territories.

The paper specifically called for a "comprehensive containment capability" to counter ballistic missile threats from North Korea.

"This is nothing but a broad hoax by Japan to justify its moves to turn it into a military giant which have gone beyond the danger line," KCNA said.

The commentary argued that "loudmouth" warnings about the missile and nuclear threat from North Korea were aimed at diverting international attention from efforts by Shinzo Abe's conservative government to ditch Japan's pacifist constitution.

"Japan's assertions are too unreasonable and illogical to justify its sinister aim," the agency said.

"Japan would be well advised to behave with reason, aware that to do so would be beneficial to its security," it warned.

The KCNA commentary was released a day after Japan unveiled a $1.2 billion helicopter carrier aimed at defending its territorial claims following maritime skirmishes with China.

Japan's well-funded and well-equipped military is referred to as the Self-Defense Forces, and is barred from taking aggressive action. Any move to beef up the military would require constitutional change.

Hundreds of South Korean businessmen rallied Wednesday near the border with North Korea, urging the swift resumption of operations at their abandoned plants in a shuttered inter-Korean industrial zone.

The protest came amid signs that South Korea is considering permanently withdrawing from the Kaesong complex, which was closed in April as military tensions surged across the Korean peninsula.

Seoul is preparing to pay insurance claims to companies with investments in the 123 South Korean firms located in Kaesong -- a move widely seen as a prelude to a permanent shutdown.

The two Koreas have held six rounds of fruitless meetings on Kaesong's future, and on Sunday the South said it was "reaching the limit" of its patience.

On July 28, Seoul proposed a "final" round of talks to resolve the issue, but Pyongyang has yet to respond.

At Wednesday's hour-long rally in Paju near the border, some 500 people including representatives from the Kaesong-based companies urged both sides to reach a swift agreement to reopen the zone.

Labelling Kaesong a "symbol of peace", they called on North Korea to accede to the South's request for a binding guarantee to avoid any unilateral shutdown of the complex in the future.

They have also urged Seoul to show more "flexibility" in its negotiations with Pyongyang.

Set up just north of the border in 2004, Kaesong had survived previous inter-Korean crises, but eventually fell victim to two months of elevated tensions following a nuclear test by the North in February.

In early April, the North withdrew all its 53,000 workers who produced textiles and other goods at the Kaesong plants.

The North has rejected the South's demands for a guarantee, saying it would be tantamount to accepting responsibility for the Kaesong shutdown.

Pyongyang says the decision to pull out its workforce was the direct result of military intimidation from South Korea as it held joint military exercises with the United States.

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NUKEWARS
S. Korea losing patience with North on Kaesong talks
Seoul (AFP) Aug 04, 2013
South Korea on Sunday warned the North it was "reaching the limit" of its patience over stalled talks to revive a joint industrial complex once seen as a rare symbol of cooperation between the rivals. Six rounds of cross-border meetings aimed at restarting the venture, a key source of hard currency for the North Korea's communist regime, produced little progress as each side squabbled over w ... read more


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