North Korea calls off trial train run over border
SOUTH KOREA: North Korea has called off trial train runs across the
heavily militarised border with the South which would have been the
first such crossings in more than half a century, a South Korean
official said on Wednesday.
"North Korea has cancelled the test runs this morning," said a
Unification Ministry official, who asked not to be identified.
He said the communist-run North's powerful military had given no
guarantee of secure passage ahead of Thursday's planned runs, which
would have marked the first time trains had crossed the fortified border
since they were halted during the Korean War.
South Korea is keen for trains to cross the border, but officials in
Seoul say the North's powerful military has been reluctant to sign off
on a plan for through trains.
The test runs would have covered a small length of track on rail
links running along either side of the peninsula.
The western rail link would help in the shipment of goods in and out
of an industrial park in Kaesong where South Korean companies produce
goods at factories using cheap North Korean labour and land.
The eastern rail link would help in the tourism trade. A Hyundai
group affiliate that runs the Kaesong industrial park also runs a
mountain resort in North Korea on the east coast that millions of South
Koreans have visited.
Seoul, Wednesday Reuters |