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South Korean Army soldiers search for landmines near the demilitarised zone in 2010. Both Koreas have now promised to remove mines on both sides of the border, as part of their recent deals to ease decades-long military tensions. Photo: AP

South Korea starts pulling mines from DMZ, but will the North to do same?

The process is part of tension-easing deals both countries’ defence chiefs struck on the sidelines of a leaders’ summit last month in Pyongyang

North Korea

South Korea began clearing mines from two sites inside the heavily fortified border with North Korea on Monday under tension-reducing agreements reached this year. Seoul says North Korea is expected to do the same.

The development comes amid renewed international diplomacy on North Korea’s nuclear weapons programme after weeks of stalemated negotiations. US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is to visit Pyongyang this month to try to set up a second summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.

South Korean troops entered the demilitarised zone on Monday morning to remove mines around the border village of Panmunjom and another frontline area where the rivals plan their first joint searches with North Korea for soldiers during the 1950-53 Korean war, according to Seoul’s Defence Ministry.

The South Korean troops will try to focus on taking out mines on the southern parts of Panmunjom’s Joint Security Area and the so-called Arrow Head Hill, where one of the fiercest battles during the Korean war happened. Seoul officials believe the remains of about 300 South Korean and UN forces are in the Arrow Head Hill and likely many Chinese and North Korean remains too.

South Korea's Defence Minister Song Young-moo and North Korea's Minister of the People's Armed Forces No Kwang-chol hold the signed documents as South Korean President Moon Jae-in, rear left, and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, rear right. Both parties agreed to remove mines from the DMZ. Photo: AP

South Korean Defence Ministry officials said they could not immediately confirm whether North Korea also began demining on the northern parts of the two sites. But they said they expected the North to abide by the tension-easing deals their defence chiefs struck on the sidelines of their leaders’ summit last month in Pyongyang.

Aiming to reduce conventional military threats, the Koreas’ defence chiefs also agreed to withdraw 11 frontline guard posts by December and set up buffer zones along their land and sea boundaries and a no-fly zone above the borderline to prevent accidental armed clashes.

Harry's View.

About 2 million mines are believed to be peppered inside the Koreas’ 248km (155-mile) demilitarised zone that was originally created as a buffer zone at the end of the Korean war. The DMZ is the world’s most heavily fortified border that is also guarded by hundreds of thousands of combat troops, barbed wire fences and tank traps on both sides.

Many experts say the fate of inter-Korean deals can be affected by how nuclear negotiations would go between the United States and North Korea. Past rapprochement efforts were often stalled after an international stand-off over the North’s nuclear ambitions intensified.

Military guard posts of North Korea, right top, and South Korea, left bottom, are seen in Paju, at the DMZ border. Photo: AP

After provocative tests of three intercontinental ballistic missiles and a powerful nuclear weapon last year, North Korea entered talks with the United States and South Korea earlier this year, saying it’s willing to deal away its expanding nuclear arsenal. Kim Jong-un has subsequently held a series of summits with US, South Korean and Chinese leaders and taken some steps like dismantling his nuclear-testing site.

Nuclear diplomacy later came to a standstill amid disputes over how genuine North Korea is about its disarmament pledge. But Trump, Pompeo and other US officials have recently reported progress in the denuclearisation discussions with the North. Pompeo is to make his third trip to North Korea soon for talks.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Seoul begins to clear mines from border battle sites
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