Can South Korea's Moon make 'sunshine'
again with defiant North?
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[May 05, 2017]
By James Pearson and Ju-min Park
SEOUL (Reuters) - In February 2016, Yoo
Chang-geun and around 120 other South Korean businessmen frantically
pulled their staff out of the Kaesong Industrial Zone, jointly run with
North Korea. Seoul had ordered it closed after Pyongyang defied
international warnings and tested a long-range rocket.
Now, with South Koreans in next week's presidential election almost
certain to elect liberal Moon Jae-in, they have reason for hope. Moon
has promised to reopen the complex, the signature project of the
so-called "Sunshine Policy" of engagement with North Korea pursued
earlier this century.
“We are more hopeful than ever," Yoo says. "Moon might not be able to
reopen Kaesong right away but he will follow steps toward it in the
course of improving South-North Korean relations.”
But reopening Kaesong could go against the spirit of U.N. sanctions to
prevent money from going into North Korea's banned weapons programs,
government officials and experts say.
And for Moon to justify a return to engagement, North Korea would first
need to at least signal a concession, said Lim Eul-chul, a professor at
Kyungnam University in South Korea.
“Most importantly, not to make further provocation, like no more nuclear
and missile tests. It can come out and show some kind of forward-looking
stance, even if it is just words," Lim said.
North Korea hinted at further nuclear tests as recently as this week,
saying it will bolster its nuclear force "to the maximum" "in a
consecutive and successive way".
The isolated country has carried out five nuclear tests and a series of
missile tests despite ever-tightening U.N. and other international
sanctions. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has vowed to launch an
intercontinental ballistic missile at any time that can strike the
mainland United States with a nuclear weapon.
For a graphic on South Korea's presidential election click
http://tmsnrt.rs/2p8kyHn
WAGES DIVERTED TO WEAPONS
Born out of the first of only two summits between leaders of the two
Koreas in 2000, the Kaesong project opened to much fanfare in 2004 as a
model of commercial cooperation: capital would come from South Korea and
cheap labor from the North.
But critics say hundreds of millions of dollars paid to North Korea over
the years as wages for workers at Kaesong were used to fund the
development of nuclear weapons and missiles. North Korea had demanded
that the wages be paid to the state and not directly to the workers.
Jong Kun Choi, who advises the 64-year-old Moon on foreign policy, said
the candidate believes better inter-Korean relations is the best way to
provide security on the Korean peninsula.
Moon, the son of North Korean refugees who came to the South during the
1950-53 Korean War, would end nine years of conservative rule in Seoul
if elected, a time when Pyongyang stepped up its nuclear and missile
tests.
"We want to be in the driver’s seat. Driving would mean doing so very
actively with the United States, and Pyongyang.”
But he acknowledged the next administration would inherit "some very bad
circumstances" that would make it difficult to simply revert to the
engagement policies of previous liberal presidents Kim Dae-jung and Roh
Moo-hyun, who served from 1998 to 2008.
“How can we inject so-called Sunshine Policy into a situation that is so
different to 10 years ago?," Choi told Reuters.
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Moon Jae-in, the presidential candidate of the Democratic Party of
Korea, is greeted by his supporters during his election campaign
rally in Goyang, South Korea, May 4, 2017. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
Moon, a human rights lawyer who was a top aide to the late president
Roh, has Washington worried his more moderate approach could
undercut efforts to increase pressure and sanctions on Pyongyang,
senior South Korean government officials said.
Moon's election would also complicate the deployment of the Terminal
High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system. He has repeatedly said
the incoming administration should decide whether to deploy the
anti-missile system and it should be ratified by parliament.
'WILD CARD FACTOR
A conservative president in Washington and a liberal president in
Seoul may not necessarily be an incompatible mix, said John Delury
at Seoul's Yonsei University. Both Moon and Trump, for instance,
have indicated they would be willing to meet with Kim Jong Un.
"There's the wild card factor," said Delury. "It takes us back to
one of Trump's first statements about North Korea where he said why
don't we talk to the guy. He shares a premise there with South
Korean liberals. Are these two guys really so out of joint?"
North Korea's state media has been quiet about the candidacy of
Moon, shielding him from the harsh invective usually reserved for
conservative leaders in Seoul.
The official KCNA news agency called former president Park Geun-hye
a "prostitute" being "pimped" by U.S. presidents and blamed her
"venomous swish of skirt" for rising tensions between the two
Koreas. It also insulted former U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon, who
considered a presidential run early in the year, calling him a
“wicked pro-U.S. element and dirty political philistine.”
Rhetoric aside, Moon has said it will be practically impossible to
renew dialogue with Pyongyang if it conducts another nuclear test.
Yoo, who employed 430 North Korean workers at a semiconductor parts
manufacturing plant in Kaesong, said his revenue has halved since he
was forced to leave the industrial zone last year.
A February survey conducted by the association of South Korean
companies that operated in Kaesong showed that two thirds were
willing to go back to Kaesong.
"We don’t want to see our companies leaving for China and Vietnam.
We want to go back to Kaesong, a symbol of South-North economic
cooperation," Yoo said.
Yoo likened the two Koreas to a divorced couple, saying talks for
resumption of the Kaesong project can be “a beginning for the
divorced couple to get back together,”.
(Additional reporting by Jack Kim, Editing by Soyoung Kim and Bill
Tarrant)
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