South Korea's unification minister resigns as Korean tensions rise
North has virtually cut off all co-operation with South in recent months
South Korean President Moon Jae-in on Friday accepted the resignation of his point man on North Korea, who had asked to quit after the North destroyed a liaison office while ramping up pressure against Seoul amid stalled nuclear negotiations with the U.S.
Kim Yeon-chul was appointed unification minister in April of last year as talks between the U.S. and Pyongyang began falling apart, and leaves the job without having had a single meeting with the North Koreans. He said he wanted to resign to take responsibility for tensions between the rivals.
The North in recent months has virtually cut off all co-operation with the South while expressing frustration over Seoul's unwillingness to break away from ally Washington and restart inter-Korean economic projects held back by U.S.-led sanctions over its nuclear weapons program.
Kim offered to resign after North Korea, in a made-for-TV demonstration on Tuesday, used explosives to destroy a North-South liaison building in its border town of Kaesong. The North has also declared it will cut off all government and military communication channels and abandon a key military agreement reached in 2018 to reduce conventional threats, which experts say elevates risks of skirmishes in land and sea border areas.
No apparent replacement
It isn't immediately clear who Moon is considering as Kim's replacement. There are calls for Moon to overhaul his foreign policy and national security personnel amid deteriorating relations with the North and Seoul's fading role as a mediator in the talks between Washington and Pyongyang, The negotiations have faltered over disagreements in exchanging sanctions relief and disarmament steps.
Moon's government was credited for co-ordinating a diplomatic push to defuse the nuclear standoff with North Korea, with his envoys shuttling between Pyongyang and Washington to help set up the first meeting between the North's leader, Kim Jong-un, and U.S. President Donald Trump in Singapore in June 2018.
But there's criticism that South Korean officials had been too optimistic about the signs they were seeing from Pyongyang. They ran into credibility problems once it became clear Kim had no intention of voluntarily dealing away the nukes he likely sees as his strongest guarantee of survival.
While taking provocative steps toward the South this month, the North has also unleashed vitriol against North Korean refugees and activists who for years have flown anti-Pyongyang leaflets across the border that denounced Kim's nuclear ambitions and human rights record.
The North, which is sensitive to any criticism of its leadership, has mobilized massive demonstrations in past weeks condemning the refugees whom its state media describe as "human scum." Its military has also announced plans to support North Korean civilians flying anti-South Korean propaganda leaflets in areas near the land and sea border. Experts say that could potentially create security problems for the South.
Efforts to constrain activists
Desperate to prevent tensions from getting out of control, the South has vowed to stop the activists and threatened to press charges against two North Korean-born brothers who for years have led campaigns dropping leaflets over the border and floating rice-filled bottles into the North by sea.
WATCH | North Korea vs. South Korea: Why has the peninsula been divided?
One of them, Park Sang-hak, vowed to continue his work and accused Seoul of caving to North Korean threats. He recently told The Associated Press he was planning to drop about a million leaflets over the border sometime around the June 25 anniversary of the start of the 1950-53 Korean War. He also planned to use drones so that he "could drop the leaflets on Kim Jong-un's head."
However, his brother, Park Jung-oh, cancelled Sunday plans to release bottles filled with dried rice and coronavirus masks at an island near the western sea border, citing the animosities between the Koreas, according to his group.
"The [South Korean] government will closely co-ordinate with police and local authority to strengthen on-site response and security" to prevent the border campaigns, Unification Ministry spokeswoman Cho Hye-sil said Friday.
While Seoul has sometimes sent police to block the activists from leafleting during sensitive times, it had previously resisted North Korea's calls to fully ban them, saying they were exercising their freedom of speech.
Experts say the North could be using anti-Pyongyang activists as an excuse to dial up pressure on the South as it attempts to build internal unity and shift public attention away from diplomatic failures and a dismal economy that likely worsened under the COVID-19 pandemic.