NOVANEWS
South Korean officials have been in damage control over the past several days following revelations by a senior official earlier this week that a “non-consensual” scenario on unification with North Korea was among the contingencies the Committee for Unification was looking at.
Also on Thursday, the leaders of seven South Korean civic groups held a press conference in Seoul, noting in a joint statement that “any attempt to reunify the two Koreas by force would bring extreme cross-border confrontation and an end to inter-Korean relations.” The statement urged the government to “give up any attempt to reunify the North through absorption and [to] take a path of win-win co-existence.”The 50-member Presidential Committee for Unification Preparation was launched by President Park Geun-hye last July as one of her administration’s key policy initiatives. The Ministry of Unification, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and other ministries and experts participate in the Presidential Committee, with President Park serving as the panel’s Chair.
Park unveiled her vision for unification last March in Dresden, Germany. North Korea has slammed the resulting Dresden Declaration, eying the South’s initiative with suspicion, and seeing it as a possible attempt to unify the two countries by force.An official speaking on condition of anonymity told The Korea Herald Wednesday that the Unification Panel has been bogged down “by administrative work, including…contacts with more than 50 civilian experts and advisors.” The official noted that creating a separate panel to study forceful unification would be “impossible,” given its current lack of capacity.






