South
Korea, U.S. to discuss missile defense; South cuts power to Kaesong park
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[February 12, 2016]
By Jack Kim and Ju-min Park
SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea will begin
talks with Washington as early as next week on deploying an advanced
U.S. missile defense system following North Korea's rocket launch, an
official said on Friday, as Seoul cut power to a factory park run
jointly with the North.
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The discussions would focus on placing one Terminal High Altitude
Area Defence (THAAD) unit with the U.S. military in South Korea
after the North's launch last weekend, a South Korean defense
official told Reuters on condition of anonymity.
Seoul and Washington said the test violated U.N. Security Council
resolutions.
South Korea on Wednesday suspended operations at the Kaesong
industrial zone as punishment for the rocket launch and a nuclear
test last month. The zone, located just inside North Korea, had
operated for more than a decade.
The North called the move "a declaration of war" on Thursday and
expelled the South's workers. Kaesong was the last venue for regular
interaction between the divided Koreas.
The 280 South Koreans who had remained in Kaesong rushed to leave
the industrial park on Thursday evening, completing the pullout at
11:05 p.m.(1405 GMT), the South's Unification Ministry, which
handles relations with the North, said.
A few minutes before midnight, the South shut off the supply of
electricity into Kaesong that powered the factory zone, the ministry
said early on Friday. It also cut the water supply.
The United States, Japan and South Korea are seeking tougher
sanctions against the North following the nuclear test and rocket
launch.
Isolated North Korea regularly dismisses the South as a puppet of
the United States and just as regularly accuses both of acts of war
against it.
U.S. military officials have said the THAAD system was needed in
South Korea, but Seoul had been reluctant to openly discuss its
deployment as it tried to balance its alliance with the United
States and ties with China, its biggest trade partner.
South Korea and the United States said that if THAAD was deployed to
South Korea, it would be focused only on the North.
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China and Russia have expressed concern about the potential
deployment of a system that operates a radar that could penetrate
deep into their territories.
THAAD, built by Lockheed Martin Corp <LMT.N>, is designed to
intercept and destroy ballistic missiles inside or just outside the
atmosphere during their final phase of flight.
KAESONG CONFLICT
South Korea accused the North of "illegal" acts by freezing the
assets of South Korean companies in Kaesong, warning that Pyongyang
would be held responsible for any consequences from the industrial
park's suspension.
The Kaesong project employed about 55,000 North Koreans, who were
given a taste of life in the South, working for the 124 mostly
small- and medium-sized manufacturers that operated there, about 54
km (34 miles) northwest of Seoul.
The average wage for North Korean workers was roughly $160 a month,
paid to a state management company. Except for Kaesong, both
countries forbid their citizens from communicating with each other
across their heavily armed border.
Despite volatile North-South relations, Kaesong had been shut only
once before, for five months in 2013 amid heightened tensions
following Pyongyang's third nuclear test.
(Editing by Tony Munroe and Dean Yates)
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