SEOL: South Korea has offered high level talks with North Korea on 9 January to discuss its possible participation in the 2018 Winter Olympic Games.
It comes after the North’s leader Kim Jong-un said he was considering sending a team to Pyeongchang in South Korea for the Games in February. He said the two sides should “urgently meet to discuss the possibility”.
South Korea’s president said earlier he saw the offer as a chance to improve the highly tense relationship.
South Korean Unification Minister Cho Myoung-gyon proposed on Tuesday that representatives could meet at Panmunjom, the so-called “truce village”.
The village, in the heavily guarded demilitarised zone (DMZ) at the border, is where the Koreas have historically held talks.
“We hope that the South and North can sit face to face and discuss the participation of the North Korean delegation at the Pyeongchang Games as well as other issues of mutual interest for the improvement of inter-Korean ties,” said Mr Cho.
It is not yet known who will be attending the proposed talks on the 9 January, and North Korea has yet to respond.
The last high-level talks took place in December 2015 in the Kaesong joint industrial zone.
They ended without any agreement and the meeting’s agenda was not made public.
North Korea has in the past two years quickly advanced its nuclear and convention weapons programme, despite increasing international sanctions.
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