Hyundai, N. Korea hope to resume S. Korean tours to Mt. Kumgang this year
  • 6 years ago
현정은 "올해 안으로 금강산관광이 재개됐으면 해... 북측도 그렇게 느껴"

Officials from South Korea's Hyundai Group crossed the border to visit Mount Kumgang, to commemorate the Hyundai Asan's late former chair.
The group's chairwoman told reporters that she hopes to resume the stalled tours within this year.
Oh Jung-hee has the full story.
North Korea wants to resume South Korean tours to Mount Kumgang within this year.
That's according to Hyun Jeong-eun, the chairwoman of Hyundai Group,... who took a day-long trip Friday to the North's Mount Kumgang.
The trip was to pay tribute to her late husband, the former chairman of Hyundai Asan, Chung Mong-hun,... who worked extensively on inter-Korean projects in the early 2000s.

Hyun said about 20 North Korean officials attended the ceremony to commemorate him.
And they told her that North Korea still believes firmly in Hyundai and will cooperate if the company again takes the lead in inter-Korean projects.
Hyun said she also hopes to resume South Korean tours to Mount Kumgang within this year.

Hyundai Asan spearheaded both the tours to Mount Kumgang and the inter-Korean Kaesong Industrial Complex.
But South Korean tours to North Korea's Mount Kumgang stopped after a South Korean tourist was shot dead in 2008.
And the Kaesong factory park was shut down in February 2016 after North Korea conducted its fourth nuclear test.

Remarking on Hyundai's visit, Pyongyang's external propaganda website, Uriminzokkiri, emphasized that North Korea formed a special relationship with Hyundai much earlier than it did with the Seoul government.
It also praised Hyundai for making the difficult decision to run tours to Mount Kumgang, which is located near the heavily militarized inter-Korean border.
Pyongyang has in recent days urged South Korea to resume such tours through a series of reports in its state-run newpaper, Rodong Sinmun,... even calling on Seoul to break away from international sanctions.

North Korea is in a diplomatic push for the Mount Kumgang tours to be resumed,... but the South Korean government remains firm.
Seoul's unification ministry says... its hope to resume the tours remains the same... but they can only restart once the international sanctions on North Korea are lifted completely.
Oh Jung-hee, Arirang News.
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