South Korea will allow private organizations to contact North Korea to support flood relief efforts, emphasizing that the government is making an exception after previously appearing to forbid such contact amid strained inter-Korean ties.
A unification ministry spokesperson said during a press briefing on Friday that the ROK government decided to grant permission to groups that have applied to help DPRK residents “return to their daily lives as soon as possible.”
South Korea will allow private organizations to contact North Korea to support flood relief efforts, emphasizing that the government is making an exception after previously appearing to forbid such contact amid strained inter-Korean ties.
A unification ministry spokesperson said during a press briefing on Friday that the ROK government decided to grant permission to groups that have applied to help DPRK residents “return to their daily lives as soon as possible.”
Try unlimited access
Only $1 for four weeks
-
Unlimited access to all of NK News: reporting, investigations,
analysis
-
Year-one discount if you continue past $1 trial period
-
The NK News Daily Update, an email newsletter to keep you in
the loop
-
Searchable archive of all content, photo galleries, special columns
-
Contact NK News reporters with tips or requests for reporting
Get unlimited access to all NK News content, including original reporting,
investigations, and analyses by our team of DPRK experts.
Subscribe
now
All major cards accepted. No commitments – you can cancel any time.