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North Korea Calls Off Long Awaited Test of Rail Links With South
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=12577F4:3919ACA Pyongyang cites
lack of progress in military talks, plus political conditions in
South, as reason for decision North Korea has canceled a landmark test
of rail links with South Korea one day before it was scheduled to take
place. The North Koreans cited a lack of progress in military talks,
plus political conditions in the South, as the reason for their
decision. South Korean officials are calling the postponement "very
regrettable."

South Korean Unification Minister Lee Jeong-seok called an emergency
meeting Wednesday after North Korea sent a telegram calling off the
railroad test scheduled for Thursday.





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South Korean workers clean the railway tracks, which the two Koreas
hope to reconnect as a part of an agreement The test was to involve
two short stretches of rail track - one on the eastern side of the
peninsula and one in the West - that cross the heavily fortified
Demilitarized Zone, which has divided the Koreas for more than 50
years.

Unification Ministry spokesman Shin Eon-sang expressed Seoul's deep
disappointment.

Shin says North Korea's unilateral delay of the test is very
regrettable, and that full responsibility for the delay lies with
Pyongyang. He says he hopes North Korea takes sincere steps to put the
rail test back on schedule.

A report by the North Korean Central News Agency Wednesday cited the
failure of last week's high-level military talks between the two
Koreas as the main reason for the postponement. Generals from the two
sides had hoped to reach agreement on a military protocol for the rail
test, which passes through sensitive security areas.

Despite the setback, South Korean Defense Minister Yoon Kwang-ung
remained positive about the prospects for the rail link.

He says the North's unilateral decision to delay the rail test does
not necessarily indicate a decline in North-South relations. He says
Unification Ministry officials will be working closely with Pyongyang
on the issue in the days ahead.

Yoon was addressing a news conference on South Korean military reform,
in which he outlined plans for a smaller, more advanced military by
the year 2020.

Former South Korean President Kim Dae-jung, whose landmark summit with
North Korean leader Kim Jong Il in 2000 helped open an era of relative
cooperation between the two Cold War rivals, is scheduled to make a
follow-up visit to Pyongyang next month. Mr. Kim had hoped to make the
journey by train.

Wednesday's North Korean announcement also referred to "political
conditions" in South Korea as a reason for the postponement. It quoted
an unnamed North Korean official as expressing concern over what was
described as "pro-United States, ultra-right conservative forces" in
the South.

The remark is considered a reference to expectations that South
Korea's main opposition party, the conservative Grand National Party,
or GNP, is headed for a victory in regional elections scheduled for
next Wednesday. A GNP-led government in South Korea would likely make
fewer concessions to North Korea than the Uri Party of South Korean
President Roh Moo-hyun.