Rival Koreas hold military talks—reports

South Korean soldiers ride a military truck on the road leading to North Korea at a military checkpoint in the border city of Paju on Wednesday. South Korea and the United States upgraded their coordinated military surveillance status on April 10, a report said, ahead of an expected mid-range missile launch by North Korea. AFP PHOTO

South Korean soldiers ride a military truck on the road leading to North Korea at a military checkpoint in the border city of Paju. AFP FILE PHOTO

SEOUL — Military generals from North and South Korea met at a border village Wednesday for talks on how to ease animosities between the rival countries following two shooting incidents last week, South Korean media said.

The two Koreas traded gunfire Friday after South Korean activists floated balloons carrying anti-Pyongyang propaganda leaflets across the border. Earlier last week, their navies exchanged warning shots along the countries’ disputed sea boundary. There were no reports of casualties from either incident, which served as a reminder of tensions running high on the divided Korean Peninsula.

After the gunfire exchange, South Korea said it would sternly deal with any further provocations by North Korea, but stressed that the door for dialogue remained open. North Korea urged South Korea to stop hostile acts such as dropping leaflets if it wants improved ties.

Hopes for better relations were given impetus after a group of high-level North Korean officials made a rare visit to South Korea earlier this month and agreed to resume senior-level talks.

South Korea has said the senior-level talks would be among government officials, not military officers.

Wednesday’s meeting among the generals at the border village of Panmunjom was expected to focus on how to ease tensions along the sea boundary, the scene of several bloody inter-Korean naval skirmishes in recent years, as well as discuss the dropping of propaganda leaflets, Yonhap news agency reported, citing unidentified South Korean government and ruling party sources.

YTN television network carried a similar report.

North Korea has long demanded South Korea prohibit activists from dropping leaflets, but South Korea has refused, citing freedom of speech.

Senior opposition lawmaker Park Jie-won told a party meeting that the agenda for Wednesday’s talks would include the sea boundary dispute and the propaganda balloons, according to a statement posted on his website.

Seoul’s Defense Ministry and Unification Ministry said they couldn’t confirm the talks. The meeting, if confirmed, would represent the first military talks between the two Koreas since early 2011, according to South Korean defense officials.

Yonhap said North Korea had requested South Korea not to publicize the meeting.

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