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North Korea holds working-level talks with South Korea

The first round of talks lasted about 90 minutes, and differing views prevailed between the two sides.

By Elizabeth Shim
North Korean delegate Hwang Chol, left, shakes hands with Kim Ki-woong, director-general of the Unification Ministry's Special Office for Inter-Korean Dialogue. Photo Courtesy of Republic of Korea Ministry of Unification
North Korean delegate Hwang Chol, left, shakes hands with Kim Ki-woong, director-general of the Unification Ministry's Special Office for Inter-Korean Dialogue. Photo Courtesy of Republic of Korea Ministry of Unification

SEOUL, Nov. 26 (UPI) -- Delegates of North and South Korea met for working-level talks on Thursday in the truce village of Panmunjom but the initial round of dialogue yielded few results.

The meeting was the first between Seoul and Pyongyang since high-level negotiations defused border tensions on Aug. 25, when North Korea had declared a semi-state of war.

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Yonhap reported the encounter began on a promising note, with both sides exchanging pleasantries marked by smiles and handshakes.

Hwang Chol, the high-level official with Pyongyang's Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea, greeted South Korea's Kim Ki-woong, director-general of the Unification Ministry's Special Office for Inter-Korean Dialogue, with a customary Korean greeting and exchanged handshakes with Kim Choon-whan, a director at the South's Ministry.

But a communication channel that links the Panmunjom meeting place, on the North's side, with Pyongyang and Seoul experienced a malfunction, and the meeting was delayed for two hours, and talks did not begin until 12:50 p.m., Seoul time.

The first round of talks lasted about 90 minutes but South Korean news network MBN reported differing views on hot-button issues and "formalities" regarding further, higher-level talks between the two governments may have resulted in an impasse on Thursday.

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The South is likely to have proposed a meeting between Unification Minister Hong Yong-pyo and Kim Yang Gon, North Korea's director of the United Front Department of the Korean Workers' Party. But Pyongyang may have been unwilling to volunteer such a high-ranking official, South Korea press reported.

Others issues that could have been raised include the South Korean May 24 economic sanctions, the resumption of an inter-Korea tourism program to North Korea's Mount Kumgang region and North-South family reunions.

In 2013, North-South talks collapsed due to a failure on both sides to agree on who should lead the delegations.

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