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Relations have chilled since South Korea's new President Lee took office with a tougher policy on the North. However, Lee proposed Friday a resumption of dialogue between the Koreas and said he would respect earlier agreements from North-South summits, a softening of his earlier stance. "Full dialogue between the two Koreas must resume," Lee said told the opening session of parliament. "The South Korean government is willing to engage in serious consultations on how to implement" the summit deals and other previous agreements between the two sides, he said. Lee also said he is "ready to cooperate in efforts to help relieve the food shortage in the North as well as alleviate the pain of the North Korean people." Lee was briefed on the tourist's death right before he departed for the National Assembly speech, his office said, but did not mention it in his comments. International agencies have warned that North Korea is facing its worst food shortages in years due to severe floods last year. The shortages were aggravated by the lack of assistance from South Korea amid stalled relations. Lee's predecessors regularly sent food across the heavily armed border. The South Korean president also urged the North to resolve humanitarian issues such as resuming reunions of families separated between the Koreas, and also allowing hundreds of South Korean POWs and civilians believed to be held in the North to return home. Meanwhile on Friday, talks on North Korea's nuclear disarmament pushed into a second day, with negotiators discussing the North's complaint that it has not received most of the energy assistance it was promised in exchange for disabling its weapons program. Delegates from the six countries also reached a consensus on establishing a verification and monitoring mechanism for Pyongyang's nuclear facilities, a South Korean government official said Friday. The official asked not to be named because the talks were still under way. The overall goal of the six-nation talks is to hash out details of what could be a monthslong effort to verify the communist state's declaration of its nuclear materials, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill told reporters after the first day of talks Thursday.
[Associated
Press;
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