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Most South Korean workers leave joint industrial zone

Published: 30 Apr 2013 - 03:19 am | Last Updated: 02 Feb 2022 - 02:20 pm

PAJU: Most remaining South Korean workers at a troubled joint industrial zone in North Korea returned home early yesterday after Seoul ordered a pullout following months of tensions.

Forty-three workers from Kaesong — once a rare symbol of inter-Korean cooperation — crossed back over the world’s most heavily militarised frontier shortly after midnight, according to Seoul’s Unification Ministry.

But seven supervisors remained for talks with the North Koreans about unresolved administrative issues such as the wages of local workers, according to the ministry, which did not say when they were expected to return.

The evacuation raises the prospect of the permanent closure of the industrial park, the last point of contact between the two Koreas and a key source of income for Kim Jong-Un’s isolated regime.

South Korean companies with factories at the site have expressed shock at the sudden pullout.

The complex is the victim of escalating tensions triggered by a nuclear test by the North in February, which has been followed by a series of bellicose threats of nuclear war and missile tests by Kim Jong-Un’s regime.

The South’s Unification Ministry played down concerns about the seven remaining employees, who work for the Kaesong Industrial District Management Committee and telecoms company KT Corp.

“We believe there is no chance of South Korean officials being held as hostages because both sides have been locked in talks on specific and practical issues since Friday,” said ministry spokeswoman Park Soo-Jin.

“North Korea did not raise such issues suddenly to block them from crossing the border. We hope both sides will narrow their differences soon.”

South Korean Foreign Minister Yun Byung-Se told a forum in Seoul yesterday that “the window of dialogue is still open” on Kaesong, according to the South’s Yonhap news agency.

But some observers believe the shutting down of the complex would be permanent as the factory equipment there would fall into disrepair and the firms would soon lose their customers.

“Some people say that the complex may be reopened in a few weeks or months once the two sides hammer out a deal, but it’s a ludicrous idea,” Yang Moo-Jin, a professor at the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul, told AFP.

“Once the complex dies, the North will naturally deploy its troops back there, returning the military situation to the pre-Kaesong days. All the artillery units targeting Seoul will move closer to the border, which will surely heighten military tension.”

Pyongyang announced on April 8 that it was pulling out its 53,000-strong workforce from Kaesong, angered by the South’s mention of a “military” contingency plan to protect its staff at the site.

AFP