South Korea's Border Vow: Lee Jae Myung Pledges Support Amid Division

South Korean President Lee Jae Myung has committed to expanding support for residents living near the North Korean border. He expressed regret that these communities have faced disproportionate exclusion despite their sacrifices. The announcement came during a town hall meeting in Paju, where Lee highlighted the challenges border residents face from military regulations. Meanwhile, government officials reaffirmed their commitment to peaceful coexistence rather than pursuing unification by absorption.

Key Points: President Lee Jae Myung Expands Support for North Korea Border Areas

  • President Lee announced enhanced support during town hall meeting in Paju border city
  • Border communities face extensive inconveniences from strict military regulations
  • Government will explore development ways to promote balanced regional growth
  • Vice Minister reaffirmed policy against unification by absorption of North Korea
2 min read

South Korean President Lee vows to expand support for residents near border with North

South Korean President pledges increased support for border communities facing military restrictions, promising balanced regional growth and reaffirming peaceful peninsula policy.

"I feel regret that the northern Gyeonggi region has been disproportionately excluded despite having made special sacrifices - President Lee Jae Myung"

Seoul, Nov 14

South Korean President Lee Jae Myung said Friday the government will step up support for regions bordering North Korea to compensate for their long-standing sacrifices and promote balanced regional growth.

Lee made the remarks during a town hall meeting in Paju, Gyeonggi Province, located just south of the demilitarised zone separating the two Koreas. He had served as Governor of Gyeonggi Province from 2018 to 2021.

"I feel regret that the northern Gyeonggi region has been disproportionately excluded despite having made special sacrifices," Lee said, Yonhap News Agency reported.

He noted that border communities face extensive inconveniences due to strict military regulations near front-line areas, adding that the government will explore ways to promote development in the border regions.

Earlier on Monday, South Korea's Vice Unification Minister Kim Nam-jung said South Korea will pursue neither unification by absorption nor any hostile acts toward North Korea, reaffirming the policy of President Lee's government of building peace on the Korean Peninsula.

He made the remarks during a meeting with residents of border areas at Camp Greaves, a former US military base-turned-field-trip site in the western border city of Paju, just below the demilitarised zone.

"To achieve a peaceful Korean Peninsula without the need for conflict, the Lee Jae Myung government will recognise and respect the North Korean system and will neither pursue unification by absorption nor engage in any forms of hostile acts," Kim said.

The vice minister said inter-Korean relations deteriorated abnormally under the previous Yoon Suk Yeol government, adding that anti-Pyongyang leaflet campaigns at the border, as well as North Korea's retaliatory release of trash-carrying balloons and blaring of loud noise, have caused damage to border areas during the period.

"The fundamental solution to alleviating the suffering from the division is establishing peace on the Korean Peninsula," Kim said, emphasising that now is a crucial time for the two Koreas to return to dialogue and calling on Pyongyang to respond to Seoul's efforts for peace.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
As someone from Jammu, I understand exactly what these border residents go through. Military restrictions, security concerns - it's not easy. Hope our government also takes note and learns from such initiatives.
D
David E
Interesting policy shift from the new government. The commitment to avoid "unification by absorption" and hostile acts shows maturity in foreign policy. Hope this leads to lasting peace in the region.
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Ananya R
While I appreciate the peace efforts, I'm concerned about whether this approach will actually work with North Korea. Sometimes being too soft doesn't yield results. The previous government's tougher stance had its merits too.
S
Siddharth J
The part about border communities facing "extensive inconveniences" really hits home. Our villages near LOC face similar issues. Development in border areas is crucial for national security and regional balance. Good initiative! 👍
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Kavya N
Peaceful coexistence should always be the goal. The trash balloons and loud noise campaigns mentioned show how petty conflicts can harm ordinary people. Dialogue is definitely the way forward. Hope both Koreas find common ground.

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