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Korean leaders commit to peace

BayBak, Azerbaijan | 2056 days ago | Friday, 5th October , 2007 , 04:07 [am] | International

. South Korea’s president also expressed confidence on Thursday that North Korea would abandon its nuclear weapons.

The leaders agreed to make “joint efforts to ensure the smooth implementation” of agreements made at six-nation arms talks “for the solution of the nuclear issue on the Korean Peninsula” as part of a wide-ranging reconciliation pact agreed on the final day of a landmark summit in Pyongyang.


The leaders of North and South Korea have agreed to push for a full peace deal formally ending the Korean War, and introduce regular cross-border freight train services to boost economic co-operation.

South Korea’s president also expressed confidence on Thursday that North Korea would abandon its nuclear weapons.

The leaders agreed to make “joint efforts to ensure the smooth implementation” of agreements made at six-nation arms talks “for the solution of the nuclear issue on the Korean Peninsula” as part of a wide-ranging reconciliation pact agreed on the final day of a landmark summit in Pyongyang.

Ban Ki-moon, the UN chief and a former South Korean foreign minister, commended the commitment of the two leaders to advance inter-Korean relations and “move towards permanent peace on a non-nuclear peninsula”, a spokeswoman said in New York.

The declaration was signed on Thursday by Roh Moo-hyun, the South Korean president, and Kim Jong-il, the North Korean leader.

The talks between the two marked only the second ever meeting between the leaders of North and South Korea in more than half a century.

Under the declaration, the two leaders also pledged to create a joint fishing zone along their disputed sea border – a frequent source of tensions between the North and South.

North Korea has never recognised the sea border, which was drawn unilaterally by United Nations forces after the Korean War.

Nuclear dismantlement

Just hours before the declaration was signed, news came from Beijing that North Korea had agreed to a six-nation plan to dismantle all its nuclear facilities by the end of this year.

In a nod to the nuclear deal, the two leaders agreed to make joint efforts to ensure the plan is implemented smoothly – the first time Kim has personally put his name to denuclearisation efforts.

Said Roh after crossing back into South Korea: “Now that the highest leader of North Korea has confirmed a clear commitment to the North’s nuclear dismantlement, I don’t see any problem in carrying it out.

“I firmly believe that the six-party talks will proceed well without any obstacles.”

In other points, the two leaders also agreed they would hold “frequent” future summits – although no timing for any such encounters was given – and they agreed to increase cross-border family reunions, saying they would hold such meetings “constantly”.

The issue of divided families is a deeply emotional one in both countries.

Kim, in his usual khaki jumpsuit, shook hands with Roh, smiled and clinked glasses of champagne after signing the agreement.

Brink of war

North and South Korea have stood on the brink of a return to war for more than five decades, ever since the Korean War was brought to a halt with a ceasefire in 1953.

In the declaration signed in Pyongyang, Roh and Kim agreed that a more formal end to hostilities must be put in place.

“North and South Korea shared the view they must end the current armistice and build a permanent peace regime,” they said.

The two leaders also said that both sides had “agreed to closely co-operate to end military hostility and ensure peace and easing of tension on the Korean peninsula”.

However, while an agreement to push for a formal end to the war is a significant step forward, any actual treaty will also have to include China and the US, both of which fought in the Korean War.

The US still has more than 30,000 troops based in South Korea.

As for South Korea itself, it was never a signatory to the original armistice.

Question of trust

Interviewed by Al Jazeera, Brian Bridges, a professor of political science at Lingnan University, Hong Kong, said: “North Korea is in a difficult economic situation … and Kim Jong-il has to face the reality of how to get aid, how to get foreign investment into his country to raise the living standards of his people.

“To do that it requires dialogue and engagement and giving up some of the nuclear weapons or nuclear processes that he has been involved so far.

“He has become slightly more realistic about what can be achieved. … He is becoming much more attuned to international opinion and maybe he is coming out of his shell and becoming much more engaged.”

Melissa Chan, Al Jazeera’s correspondent in South Korea, said that while the declaration does include some concrete steps, it is unlikely to silence all of Roh’s critics at home in South Korea, many of whom say the North cannot be trusted to keep its word.

She said that the first inter-Korean summit in 2000 produced a joint declaration saying the two sides would meet more regularly and work towards re-unification – but it took seven years before another summit took place.

South Korea’s main opposition Grand National Party called the declaration “insufficient”.

In a statement the party, which is preparing for presidential elections early next year, said it was “very regrettable” that the two leaders “didn’t take any substantial measures or show their firm commitment to nuclear dismantlement and peace on the Korean peninsula”.aljazeera

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