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North and South Korea to hold talks next week | North and South Korea to hold talks next week |
(about 1 hour later) | |
South Korea has confirmed it has accepted an offer from North Korea to hold talks next week. | |
The talks, to be held at the Panmunjom truce village, will set the stage for high-level meetings which were agreed in principle in August. | |
That deal followed a stand-off in August that began with landmine explosions on the border and involved an exchange of artillery fire. | |
Seoul said it had sent requests for meetings before but had no response. | |
The BBC's Stephen Evans in Seoul says it is unlikely that any major decision will emerge at the talks scheduled for 26 November, but that the agreement indicates a desire on both sides to reduce tensions. | |
Border firing | |
North and South Korea are technically still at war because the 1950-53 Korean War ended in an armistice, not a peace treaty. | |
In August, a landmine explosion at the heavily militarised border seriously injured two South Korean soldiers. | |
In response, South Korea resumed its abandoned practise of blasting propaganda over the border, and evacuated people from the border region. North Korea said it had put its military on a "war footing". | |
Tensions bubbled over in a brief exchange of fire at the heavily guarded border. | |
After crisis talks, South Korea agreed to turned off the loudspeakers while the North agreed to step down its military. | |
The agreement included a pledge to resume talks on improving ties, and to hold the first reunions for families separated during the Korean war in over a year. | |
The North also expressed regret over the mine explosions, though later clarified it was not accepting responsibility for the blast. |
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