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S. Korea vows to consistently take actions for peace after N. Korea rejects Lee's overture

S. Korea vows to consistently take actions for peace after N. Korea rejects Lee's overture

Korea Herald28-07-2025
The presidential office said Monday it will consistently take necessary actions to promote peace on the Korean Peninsula after North Korea rejected President Lee Jae Myung's proposal to resume dialogue.
Earlier in the day, Kim Yo-jong, the powerful sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, said North Korea is not interested in any policy or proposal from South Korea and will not sit down with Seoul for talks.
The presidential office said it is "taking note of" Pyongyang's first official statement on inter-Korean affairs since Lee's inauguration in early June.
"We have witnessed the high wall of distrust between the two Koreas due to years of hostility and confrontation," a senior presidential official said.
"The government will consistently take necessary actions to ensure a Korean Peninsula without hostility and conflict, in line with the Lee Jae Myung administration's firm principle of establishing a state of peace where there is no need to fight," the official added.
As part of efforts to repair strained ties with the North, the Lee administration has halted anti-Pyongyang loudspeaker broadcasts along the border, urged activists to stop flying propaganda balloons to the North and repatriated North Korean fishermen who had drifted into southern waters months earlier.
In late 2013, the North's leader Kim defined inter-Korean ties as those between "two states hostile to each other," vowing not to seek reconciliation and unification with the South. (Yonhap)
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