N. Korea says it’ll release 6 from South

Why the men, ages 27 to 67, were detained and for how long is unknown

SEOUL, South Korea - In a surprise move that could help ease tensions on the Korean Peninsula, North Korea said Thursday that it would release six South Koreans it has been holding in detention, according to South Korean officials.

The Red Cross of North Korea told its South Korean counterpart that the six would be returned today at the border village of Panmunjom, the South Korean Unification Ministry said in a statement.

It was unclear who the detainees were. The ministry said that they were South Korean men ages 27 to 67, but did not know how long they had been in North Korea or how they had gotten there.

Pyongyang said in February 2010 that it was holding four South Koreans for illegal entry, but it never responded to Seoul’s request that they be identified and released. In June of this year, North Korea said it was holding “several” South Koreans for illegally entering the country, but it did not elaborate.

Thousands of South Koreans, most of them fishermen, are said to have been taken to North Korea in the decades since the Korean War; more than 500 of them have not returned, though Pyongyang denies holding them against their will.

South Korea welcomed the announcement Thursday. “Although it is belated, we consider it a good thing that the North has decided to take this humanitarian measure,” the Unification Ministry’s statement said. “We will get custody of our six citizens, verify their identities and find out how and why they entered the North.”

In recent weeks, North Korea has alternated between harsh rhetoric and conciliatory gestures. In mid-September, streams of South Korean vehicles began crossing into North Korea again as operations resumed at a jointly run industrial park in the North Korean border town of Kaesong. The complex had been idle since April, when North Korea withdrew all of its workers amid tensions sparked by its most recent nuclear test.

But soon after the Kaesong complex reopened, North Korea unilaterally postponed the resumption of an emotionally charged humanitarian program under which members of families divided by the Korean War have been allowed to hold reunions. North Korea blamed the postponement on what it called the “reckless and vicious confrontational racket” of the conservative government of Park Geun-hye, the South Korean president.

Early this month, North Korea lashed out again, advising Park to “watch her mouth” and threatening to “rain fire” on the South, after South Korean leaders said that North Korea’s policy of maintaining its nuclear-arms program while rebuilding its economy would never work. Also this month, North Korea put its military on high alert, warning the United States of “disastrous consequences” for moving warships, including an aircraft carrier, into a South Korean port for a military exercise.

But North Korea also has sent less hostile signals recently.

On Thursday, South Korean officials said that Pyongyang had agreed to allow 24 South Korean lawmakers and their aides to visit the Kaesong complex Wednesday. The lawmakers will meet with South Korean factory managers there but will not hold talks with North Korean officials, the officials said.

North Korea is eager to expand the Kaesong complex, where its low-paid workers make textiles, shoes and other labor-intensive goods in South Korean-owned factories. The North Korean leader, Kim Jong Un, has vowed to attract more foreign investment and to improve his people’s living standards.

But South Korea has remained skeptical of expanding the Kaesong project until the two Koreas can agree on measures to prevent another politically motivated shutdown, such as allowing non-Korean investment in the complex. Those negotiations have advanced fitfully, however; a briefing for potential investors from other countries was canceled this month, with continuing inter-Korean tensions cited as the reason.

Front Section, Pages 6 on 10/25/2013

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