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Sunday, January 30, 2011

Seoul rejects N.Korea bid to bring talks forward

AFP, SEOUL: Seoul on Monday rejected North Korea's proposal to bring
forward the date of military talks designed to ease months of tension,
the defence ministry said.

The ministry said it was sticking to its original suggested date of
February 11 for the preliminary talks, after the North over the
weekend proposed bringing them forward to February 1.

It would be the first cross-border dialogue since Pyongyang's
bombardment of a border island on November 23 which killed four people
including civilians.

The working-level talks, probably between colonels, are aimed at
setting the date, place and agenda for high-level military dialogue.

But Seoul says the high-level meeting will only go ahead if Pyongyang
takes responsibility for two attacks last year and promises no
repetition.

Apart from the shelling, the South accuses the North of torpedoing a
warship last March with the loss of 46 lives, a charge the North
denies.

The North also says its artillery attack on Yeonpyeong island, near
the disputed Yellow Sea border, was a justified response to a South
Korean drill which dropped shells into waters claimed by Pyongyang.

After months of fiery rhetoric, the North has changed tack this year
and made frequent appeals for dialogue. The South has described most
of the approaches as insincere.

It was unclear why the North wanted to advance the date for the
working-level talks, to be held at the border village of Panmunjom.

Officials quoted by Yonhap news agency said Pyongyang may be trying to
resume high-level dialogue before the birthday of its leader Kim
Jong-Il on February 16.

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