Key Points

North Korea has dismissed President Lee Jae Myung's call for dialogue, with Kim Yo-jong accusing Seoul of maintaining a confrontational stance. Despite the rejection, South Korea vows to continue pursuing peace initiatives on the peninsula. The Lee administration has taken steps like halting propaganda broadcasts to ease tensions. This marks Pyongyang's first official response to the new South Korean government.

Key Points: North Korea Rejects Lee Jae Myung's Peace Overture as Seoul Vows Action

  • Kim Yo-jong rejects Lee Jae Myung's dialogue proposal
  • Seoul pledges consistent efforts for peace despite North's rebuff
  • North Korea labels Lee's policies as confrontational
  • South Korea halts propaganda broadcasts to ease tensions
2 min read

South Korea vows to consistently take actions for peace after North Korea rejects Lee's overture

Kim Yo-jong dismisses South Korea's dialogue proposal, while Seoul reaffirms commitment to peace despite Pyongyang's hostile stance.

"We have witnessed the high wall of distrust between the two Koreas due to years of hostility and confrontation. – Senior Presidential Official"

Seoul, July 28

The presidential office said Monday it will consistently take necessary actions to promote peace on the Korean Peninsula after North Korea rejected South Korean President, Lee Jae Myung's proposal to resume dialogue.

Earlier in the day, Kim Yo-jong, the powerful sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, said North Korea is not interested in any policy or proposal from South Korea and will not sit down with Seoul for talks.

Kim Yo-jong, vice department director of the ruling party's central committee, made the remarks in a statement carried by the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), as South Korean President Lee Jae Myung has sought to resume dialogue with Pyongyang to ease military tension and improve inter-Korean ties.

It marks the North's first official statement on the Lee administration, which took office last month, Yonhap news agency reported.

"Looking at around the past 50 days since Lee Jae Myung took office ... (he) is no different from his predecessor in blindly adhering to the South Korea-US alliance and pursuing confrontation with us," Kim said.

The presidential office said it is "taking note of" Pyongyang's first official statement on inter-Korean affairs since Lee's inauguration in early June.

"We have witnessed the high wall of distrust between the two Koreas due to years of hostility and confrontation," a senior presidential official said.

"The government will consistently take necessary actions to ensure a Korean Peninsula without hostility and conflict, in line with the Lee Jae Myung administration's firm principle of establishing a state of peace where there is no need to fight," the official added.

As part of efforts to repair strained ties with the North, the Lee administration has halted anti-Pyongyang loudspeaker broadcasts along the border, urged activists to stop flying propaganda balloons to the North and repatriated North Korean fishermen who had drifted into southern waters months earlier.

In late 2013, the North's leader Kim defined inter-Korean ties as those between "two states hostile to each other," vowing not to seek reconciliation and unification with the South.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
North Korea's response is so predictable! They always play hardball before eventually coming to talks. South Korea should continue its peaceful approach but also maintain strong defense. India should learn from this - peace with preparedness is the way.
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Aman W
Why is South Korea even trying? After so many failed attempts, it's clear North Korea doesn't want peace. They just want to keep their dictatorship. Sometimes you need to be firm rather than keep extending olive branches that get rejected.
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Shreya B
The situation is so complex! On one hand we want peace, but how do you deal with a regime that keeps testing missiles? Maybe economic cooperation could be the way forward, like how India trades with China despite border issues.
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Nikhil C
Interesting how Kim Yo-jong is the one making statements now. The power dynamics in North Korea are shifting. South Korea needs to understand who really calls the shots there before making any moves. Reminds me of how we have to deal with Pakistan's army vs civilian government.
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Kavya N
I admire South Korea's consistent efforts for peace. In our neighborhood, we see how difficult it is to maintain peace when the other side isn't interested. Hope they find a breakthrough soon! 🙏

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