Seoul, May 8 (IANS) Private organisations from South Korea and the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) have agreed to hold a joint event in Seoul next month to celebrate the 15th anniversary of the historic June 15 Declaration, media reported on Friday.

Representatives from the South Korean preparatory committee for the event, composed of private organisations, met in Shenyang, China, for three days earlier this week with their North Korean counterparts and those representing Koreans living abroad, Xinhua news agency reported.
After the meeting, which ended on Thursday, they agreed to hold the joint commemorative event in Seoul from June 14 to 16 to mark the 15th anniversary of the June 15 Declaration, which was issued after then South Korean president Kim Dae-jung and late North Korean leader Kim Jong-il met in Pyongyang in 2000.
The keynote of the declaration is that the Korean nation is responsible for Korea’s reunification and the issue of national reunification should be settled independently by the Korean nation itself.
The agreement on the venue was orally reached, and not mentioned in the joint press release by the preparatory committees of the two Koreas, which showed differences over candidate places where the event is to be held, including Pyongyang.
It would be the first such event in seven years since 2008 when the joint ceremony was last held in Mt. Kumgang, a scenic mountain in southeastern North Korea.
The two sides also agreed to hold a separate joint event of private organisations to mark the 70th anniversary of the Korean Peninsula’s liberation from the 1910-45 Japanese colonial rule.
The venue for the liberation event could not be agreed upon during the meeting as further discussions are needed given the significant meaning of the liberation to both Seoul and Pyongyang.
The private groups agreed to designate the two-month period from June 15 to August 15 as the inter-Korean joint movement to open a new “June 15 reunification era” by carrying out various non-political inter-Korean events and exchanges in culture and sports.
The South Korean government is highly likely to approve the joint event to be held in Seoul as it already gave the green light to its private groups’ meeting with their North Korean counterparts in Shenyang. Such meetings was firstly held since 2010 when the May 24 sanctions were imposed by South Korea.
The sanctions banned all inter-Korean economic cooperation and exchanges except the Kaesong industrial complex. Seoul claimed that it was imposed after the North Korea’s torpedo attack against a South Korean battleship, a charge Pyongyang has repeatedly denied.
Unification ministry spokesman Lim Byeong-cheol told a press briefing earlier in the day that the government would consider whether to approve the event under the basic principle that private-sector exchanges would be allowed if those help improve inter-Korean relations and restore national homogeneity in culture, sports and academy.
–Indo-Asiuan News Service
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