South Korea ships tangerines to North, which sent mushrooms

After September’s inter-Korean summit talks in Pyongyang, North Korea gave South Korea 2 tons of pine mushrooms as a goodwill gesture.

November 12, 2018 09:14 am | Updated 09:27 am IST - SEOUL (South Korea):

In this Nov. 11, 2018 photo, South Korea's Air Force cargo planes C-130 carrying boxes of tangerines, is seen before its take off for North Korea at the Jeju International Airport on Jeju Island, South Korea. South Korea has airlifted thousands of boxes of tangerines to North Korea in return for the North's large shipments of pine mushrooms in September.

In this Nov. 11, 2018 photo, South Korea's Air Force cargo planes C-130 carrying boxes of tangerines, is seen before its take off for North Korea at the Jeju International Airport on Jeju Island, South Korea. South Korea has airlifted thousands of boxes of tangerines to North Korea in return for the North's large shipments of pine mushrooms in September.

South Korea has airlifted thousands of boxes of tangerines to North Korea in return for the North’s large shipments of pine mushrooms in September, Seoul officials said on Monday.

South Korea says it will send 200 tons of tangerines to North Korea by Monday afternoon. Seoul’s Defense Ministry says military planes flew to Pyongyang twice on Sunday to deliver the fruits and are doing the same on Monday.

A woman selects tangerines at a vegetable and fruit stall at a street market in Caracas, Venezuela in this file photo.

A woman selects tangerines at a vegetable and fruit stall at a street market in Caracas, Venezuela in this file photo.

 

After September’s inter-Korean summit talks in Pyongyang, North Korea gave South Korea 2 tons of pine mushrooms as a goodwill gesture.

The tangerine airlifting is a sign that the two Koreas are pushing ahead with efforts to improve ties despite a stalemated global diplomacy on North Korea’s nuclear program. According to Seoul and Washington officials, North Korea recently postponed high-level talks with the United States meant to discuss achieving North Korea’s nuclear disarmament and setting up a second summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

After a provocative run of its nuclear and missile tests last year, North Korea entered talks with the United States and South Korea this year saying it’s willing to deal away its advancing weapons arsenal. The North has since taken measures like dismantling its nuclear testing site and parts of its rocket-engine testing facility, but U.S. officials want the country to take more significant and irreversible steps toward denuclearization.

South Korea’s liberal President Moon Jae-in was behind U.S.-North Korea diplomacy. Mr. Moon has met Mr. Kim three times this year.

Moon’s Unification Ministry said on Monday it has approved a visit by seven North Koreans to attend an academic forum in South Korea later this week. The forum is about regional issues including Japan’s wartime mobilization of laborers in the Asia-Pacific region.

Seoul said on Saturday the two Koreas finished withdrawing troops and firearms from some of their frontline guard posts as part of their agreements to lower military tensions between the countries. The Koreas have halted military exercises along their border and have been clearing mines from a border area to conduct their first-ever joint searches for Korean War dead.

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