North Korea on Wednesday accused South Korea of claiming victory for an
accord that ended an armed standoff, saying that was "cowardly" and
urging the South to be "discreet in words and deeds".
The rival Koreas last week ended a confrontation that brought a rare
exchange of artillery fire on one of the world's most heavily fortified
borders, striking a deal that opened the possibility for improved
relations.
South Korean President Park Geun-hye's approval ratings surged after the
deal, which many South Korean media outlets portrayed as a win for her
tough stance against the North.
But North Korea's National Defence Commission (NDC) rejected such triumphalism.
"Nothing is more shallow and cowardly than describing the joint
statement agreed by North and South together as a victory for one side,"
the North's state-run KCNA news agency quoted the NDC as saying in a
statement.
Under the accord, reached during round-the-clock talks, North Korea
expressed regret over the wounding in early August of South Korean
soldiers in landmine blasts on their border and the South agreed to halt
anti-North Korea broadcasts over border loudspeakers.
South Korea had demanded an apology for the mine explosions in the
so-called Demilitarized Zone between them, and some South Korean
officials described the North's expression of regret as an apology.
But North Korea denied planting the mines and its NDC said it had expressed sympathy, not an apology.
"Briefly saying 'regret' is nothing more than an expression of 'I feel
sorry for what you have been through'," the commission said.
"The landmine explosion in the Demilitarized Zone was merely an accident of the type that happens too often," it said.
Responding to the North Korean statement, the South said both sides should implement the agreement sincerely.
"It is not the time to ride an emotional roller coaster or argue what's
right and wrong about the agreement," said Jeong Joon-hee, a spokesman
for the South's Unification Ministry, which handles relations with the
North.
The agreement opened a channel for dialogue on a range of issues with
the aim of improving ties that have been all-but frozen since the
sinking of a South Korean naval vessel in 2010.
On Saturday, North Korea agreed to Red Cross talks with South Korea to
discuss reunions of families split by the 1950-53 Korean War.
Source: Reuters
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