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South Korea OKs Civilian Contact With North in Goodwill Gesture


FILE - South Korea's presidential candidate Moon Jae-in in Seoul, South Korea.
FILE - South Korea's presidential candidate Moon Jae-in in Seoul, South Korea.

South Korea will allow a civic group to contact North Korea over aid programs, the first such approval since North Korea's fourth nuclear test in January 2016, Seoul officials said Friday.

The announcement is a sign that the liberal government led by new President Moon Jae-in is trying to restart stalled civilian aid and exchange programs as a way to improve strained ties with rival North Korea. Moon's conservative predecessor, Park Geun-hye, hadn't endorsed any civilian contacts since the North's fourth nuclear test.

Seoul's Unification Ministry said the Seoul-based Korean Sharing Movement would be allowed to communicate with North Korea to discuss how to deal with malaria in North Korea.

“While the new government maintains a stance of firmly responding to North Korean provocations like missile launches, it's also clear that the current severance in ties between the South and North isn't ideal for stabilizing the situation in the Korean Peninsula,” ministry spokeswoman Lee Eungene said.

The civic group said it will contact North Korea via email to try to provide North Korea with insecticides, diagnostic reagent kits and mosquito repellants and nets. Group official Kang Young-sik said his agency will try to get another government approval to visit North Korea to convey such anti-malaria items if North Korea accepts its overture.

The two Koreas remain divided along the world's most heavily fortified border. Their citizens are barred from exchanging phone calls, letters and emails without government permissions.

Since taking office earlier in May, Moon's government has said it will flexibly evaluate expanding civilian exchange with North Korea though it will strongly cope with North Korean military threats. But many analysts say Moon won't likely push for any major rapprochement projects because North Korea has gone too far on its nuclear program.

North Korea conducted two ballistic missile test-launches since Moon's May 10 inauguration. It's pushing to build a nuclear-tipped missile that can reach the continental U.S., and as part of the goal the North carried out two nuclear tests last year.

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