S. Korea Refuses to 'Coax' North with Concessions

W460

South Korea Monday rejected North Korean calls to pave the way for talks by lifting sanctions, saying its desire to resume dialogue did not extend to "coaxing" Pyongyang to the negotiating table.

Seoul has proposed high-level talks to discuss a range of issues, particularly the possibility of holding a reunion over the Lunar New Year period next month for families divided by the Korean War.

In a response last week, the North said the South should first lift sanctions it imposed in 2010 after an attack on a South Korean warship.

"We believe that meeting such unfair demands even before talks begin is not conducive to fundamental progress in inter-Korean ties," said Lim Byeong-Cheol, the spokesman for Seoul's Unification Ministry.

"Our government has no plans to pre-emptively take measures to meet the North's demands in order to coax it to the negotiating table," Lim said.

With the Lunar New Year falling on February 19, time is fast running out to set up a family reunion.

The last round of formal high-level talks was held in February last year and resulted in the North hosting a reunion the same month -- the first such event for three years.

South Korea slapped sanctions on the North in the wake of the March 2010 sinking of one of its warships, the Cheonan.

The measure effectively froze all trade and investment with the North except for the Kaesong joint industrial zone. 

Pyongyang has always denied any involvement in the sinking, which claimed the lives of 46 South Korean sailors. 

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