S Korean president criticises ‘Pyongyang Time’
SEOUL: South Korean President Park Geun-Hye on Monday criticised the North’s “regrettable” decision to turn back its clocks to a new time zone, saying it would deepen divisions between the two rivals.North Korea announced on Friday that it was changing its standard time to GMT+8:30, 30 minutes behind South Korea.Pyongyang
By our correspondents
August 11, 2015
SEOUL: South Korean President Park Geun-Hye on Monday criticised the North’s “regrettable” decision to turn back its clocks to a new time zone, saying it would deepen divisions between the two rivals.
North Korea announced on Friday that it was changing its standard time to GMT+8:30, 30 minutes behind South Korea.
Pyongyang offered a nationalist rationale for the move, saying it would return the North to an original time zone used before Japan imposed Tokyo standard time during its 1910-45 colonial rule of the Korean peninsula.
The new system is to take effect on August 15 this year — the 70th anniversary of the peninsula’s liberation from Japanese rule.
“It is highly regrettable that the North unilaterally changed its time zone with no consultation with us,” Park said during a meeting with senior aides.
Noting that Pyongyang’s move had triggered international criticism, Park said it also threatened a “further deepening of disparity between the two Koreas.”
Inter-Korean ties have been icy for years following a series of nuclear and long-range missile tests by the North and occasional military clashes along the border.
Pyongyang in recent months rejected a series of dialogue offers, citing Seoul’s refusal to halt annual military exercises with the United States. “The North’s action to break from the shared standard time ... runs counter to efforts to foster inter-Korea cooperation and to achieve reunification,” Park said.
North Korea announced on Friday that it was changing its standard time to GMT+8:30, 30 minutes behind South Korea.
Pyongyang offered a nationalist rationale for the move, saying it would return the North to an original time zone used before Japan imposed Tokyo standard time during its 1910-45 colonial rule of the Korean peninsula.
The new system is to take effect on August 15 this year — the 70th anniversary of the peninsula’s liberation from Japanese rule.
“It is highly regrettable that the North unilaterally changed its time zone with no consultation with us,” Park said during a meeting with senior aides.
Noting that Pyongyang’s move had triggered international criticism, Park said it also threatened a “further deepening of disparity between the two Koreas.”
Inter-Korean ties have been icy for years following a series of nuclear and long-range missile tests by the North and occasional military clashes along the border.
Pyongyang in recent months rejected a series of dialogue offers, citing Seoul’s refusal to halt annual military exercises with the United States. “The North’s action to break from the shared standard time ... runs counter to efforts to foster inter-Korea cooperation and to achieve reunification,” Park said.
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