South Korean businesspeople called for North Korea and South Korea to strike a deal on the reopening of the Kaesong joint industrial zone, in a statement released on the eve of last-ditch talks.
The Kaesong complex, which houses 123 South Korean firms, has been closed since Pyongyang pulled its 53,000-strong workforce out in April as military tensions soared on the divided peninsula.
Six rounds of talks on resuming operations made no progress and a seventh round today is being touted as a last-chance effort.
“This time, our government and the North’s authorities must reach agreement on reopening Kaesong without fail,” an association that represents the owners of the South Korean companies in Kaesong said in a statement.
The owners have repeatedly complained that their livelihoods are being held hostage to the intransigence of both sides in the dispute.
Built in 2004 as a rare symbol of inter-Korean cooperation, Kaesong had survived previous cross-border political swings, but became the most high-profile victim of the tensions that followed Pyongyang’s nuclear test in February.
Discussions on reopening the park, which lies 10km inside the North Korean border, appeared to have petered out.
Then, last week, just as Seoul announced it was going to start compensation payouts totaling US$250 million to businesses impacted by Kaesong’s closure, North Korea made a new proposal.
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