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North Korean leader Kim Jong-un (left) and South Korean President Moon Jae-in at the truce village of Panmunjom inside the demilitarized zone on April 27, 2018. Photo: Reuters

Silence between enemies creates uncertainty. The reopening of key communications channels between North and South Korea 13 months after they were severed is a chance for stability.

Now that phone calls are again being answered, day-to-day problems can be quickly dealt with. There is also greater opportunity for a resumption of high-level talks that can end the hostility and finally bring peace to the Korean peninsula.

The North’s leader, Kim Jong-un, expressed a willingness to restore hotlines last week after conciliatory comments by his counterpart from the South, Moon Jae-in, who called at the United Nations General Assembly for a formal end to the 1950-53 Korean war. Kim’s influential sister, Kim Yo-jong, said signing a formal peace agreement was a good idea and that another inter-Korean summit was possible, although Seoul would have to first drop its hostility towards Pyongyang.

Moon’s five-year presidential term ends in May and he is eager to forge a legacy as a peacemaker; he held three rounds of talks with Kim Jong-un in 2018, but dialogue has been at a standstill since negotiations between the North and the United States, the South’s ally, collapsed in 2019. The resumption of twice-daily calls between the sides’ militaries and communications links operated by Seoul’s unification ministry heightens the chances of the leaders meeting again.

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North Korea’s Kim Jong-un offers to reconnect vital communication line with South Korea

North Korea’s Kim Jong-un offers to reconnect vital communication line with South Korea

Restoring the hotlines is a barometer of the North’s willingness to improve bilateral relations. Since direct communications were first established in 1971, Pyongyang has severed links on numerous occasions to show displeasure with Seoul.

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