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North Korea says South Koreans can re-enter Kaesong complex

Photographers take pictures of a South Korean truck arriving from North Korea's Kaesong joint industrial complex, at a gate of the inter-Korean transit office in the border city of Paju on April 8, 2013. South Korea on April 8 issued another appeal for North Korea to lift an access ban on the Kaesong joint industrial park, which has already forced a dozen South Korean firms to halt operations. AFP FILE PHOTO

SEOUL — North Korea says South Korean businessmen can enter a jointly run industrial park in the North that has been emptied since April after tensions between the two countries soared.

In a statement carried by the North’s official media on Tuesday, the government agency in charge of relations with Seoul said Pyongyang is ready to talk about reopening the Kaesong complex if the business owners visit.

South Korea’s Unification Ministry urged North Korea to have talks with the government not civilians. It had no further comment.

Kaesong, run with cheap North Korean labor and South Korean funds and knowhow, was a last remaining symbol of inter-Korean cooperation until the North barred entry from the South in April and pulled some 50,000 workers.

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