Seoul calls for Pyongyang to respond to overture for talks
By KIM TONG-HYUNG, Associated Press
Jul 20, 2017 9:54 PM CDT
In this Wednesday, July 19, 2017 photo, a North Korean army soldier stands guard at the border villages of Panmunjom in Paju, South Korea. South Korea on Friday, July 21, urged North Korea to accept its offers for talks as Pyongyang continues to ignore Seoul's proposal for a military meeting to ease...   (Associated Press)

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korea on Friday urged North Korea to accept its offers for talks as Pyongyang continued to ignore Seoul's proposal for a military meeting to ease animosities along their tense border.

South Korea's Defense Ministry said it has become difficult to hold the meeting Seoul had originally proposed for Friday and called for the North to "quickly accept" the overture for talks.

"Easing the military tension between the South and North and restoring the military dialogue channel are very urgent tasks for peace and stability in the Korean Peninsula," the ministry said in a statement.

North Korea has yet to respond to South Korea's proposal to hold the military meeting and a separate meeting next month to resume the temporary reunions of families separated by the 1950-53 Korean War.

If realized, the talks would be the first inter-Korean dialogue since December 2015. Ties between the Koreas have worsened since over North Korea's expanding nuclear and missile programs, but South Korea's new liberal President Moon Jae-in, who took office in May, has expressed a desire to reach out to the North.

Despite North Korea apparently passing over the Friday meeting, some experts say it is likely to agree to military talks at some point, as it has been calling for the suspension of South Korean loudspeaker propaganda broadcasts that began after the North's fourth nuclear test in January 2016. It's possible that the North is taking time mulling its options and could make a counter-proposal seeking more concessions from the South in exchange for opening dialogue, the experts say.

The prospects for the meeting on the family reunions are murkier as the North has been tying the issue to its demands for the South to send back 13 North Korean restaurant workers who defected to the South last year. Pyongyang, which often makes extreme claims over defectors, has insisted that the women were abducted to the South, an accusation Seoul denies.

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