By Dan Wooding, Special to ASSIST News Service, who has reported from inside of North Korea
According to the BBC, Seoul
started the broadcasts after a landmine injured two of its soldiers on
the border earlier this month. The South's lead negotiator said the move
came after the North agreed to express ‘regret’ over the incident.”
The agreement came after marathon talks that began after an exchange of fire at the border last Thursday (August 20, 2015).
A joint statement said South
Korea would stop the loudspeaker broadcasts at midday on Tuesday and the
North would end its “semi-state of war”.
Both countries have also agreed to work towards a resumption of reunions for families separated by the 1950-53 Korean War.
National security adviser Kim
Kwan-jin, who led the negotiations for the South, said there would be
follow-up talks to discuss a range of issues on improving ties.
But he said it was not the right time to push for a summit between the leaders of the two countries.
Stephen Evans, of BBC News,
Seoul, said, “The outcome is what seasoned Korea watchers expected,
though the tension has been cranked up much higher than in recent years.
“It's not clear how much these
regular crises are manufactured and how much they are the result of
misunderstandings in a highly-armed, permanent stand-off.
Some critics of Pyongyang say
it generates crises to remind South Korea and the US that it is there
and should be treated as important - and also to keep its own citizenry
on high alert.
“Others say the government in
Seoul could do more to improve relations with the North, pointing at
what they say are provocative military exercises with the US.
The BBC said that the South
resumed the propaganda broadcasts after an 11-year hiatus earlier this
month in apparent retaliation for the landmine incident on August 4,
2015 - although the North denied having planted the mines.
It also denied shelling South Korea last week - an incident that prompted artillery fire from the South.
Pyongyang ordered its troops to
be “on a war footing” on Friday while Seoul warned that it would
“retaliate harshly” to any acts of aggression. About 4,000 residents
were also evacuated from border areas in South Korea.
The two Koreas remain technically at war, because the 1950-1953 conflict ended in an armistice, not a peace treaty.
Note: North Korea has been
named as the world’s worst persecutor of Christians for the 12th
successive year by the Open Doors World Watch List. Meanwhile, South
Korea has one of the highest per-capita number of Christians in the
world.
Photo captions: 1) North Korean
leader, Kim Jong-un, acknowledges applause from the military. 2) South
Korean DMZ guards. 3) North Korean propaganda typically involves shrill
threats and over-the-top insults. 4) Dan Wooding (left) North Korean
officer and Michael Little of CBN in the DMZ.
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