No agreement at talks between North and South Korea

The first military talks between North and South Korea in more than three years have ended with no agreement following two shooting incidents last week, South Korean officials said.

No agreement at talks between North and South Korea

The first military talks between North and South Korea in more than three years have ended with no agreement following two shooting incidents last week, South Korean officials said.

The two countries traded gunfire on Friday after South Korean activists floated balloons carrying anti-Pyongyang propaganda leaflets across the border.

Earlier last week, their navies exchanged warning shots along the nations' disputed sea boundary. There were no reports of casualties from either incident, but they served as a reminder of tensions running high on the divided Korean Peninsula.

On Wednesday, following a proposal by the North, military generals from the two Koreas met at a border village in the countries' first military talks since February 2011, according to South Korea's defence ministry.

During the closed-door meeting, North Korea repeated its demands that South Korea ban activists from dropping leaflets and media outlets from publishing articles critical of the North, ministry spokesman Kim Min-seok said at a televised news conference.

South Korean delegates responded that they cannot do so because South Korea is a liberal democracy, he said.

The sides were also at odds over the sea boundary, drawn unilaterally by the American-led UN command at the end of the 1950-53 Korean War without the North's consent, Mr Kim said.

There have been several bloody inter-Korean naval skirmishes along the boundary in recent years.

"The atmosphere of today's talks was very serious because South and North Korea both have wills to improve ties ... But they couldn't narrow their differences," Mr Kim said.

The two sides failed to set a date for a next meeting, he added.

After Friday's gunfire exchange, South Korea said it would respond sternly to any further provocations by North Korea, but stressed that the door for dialogue remained open.

North Korea has urged the South to stop hostile acts such as dropping leaflets if it wants improved ties.

Hopes for better relations were given impetus after a group of high-level North Korean officials made a rare visit to South Korea earlier this month and agreed to resume senior-level talks.

South Korea's unification ministry, which is responsible for relations with the North, said it proposed the senior-level talks for October 30.

Seoul officials have said the talks would be among government officials, not military officers.

The North Korean delegation was led by Kim Yong Chol, a hard-line general believed to have been behind two attacks blamed on North Korea that killed 50 South Koreans in 2010.

South Korean delegates reiterated during the meeting that Pyongyang must take responsibility for the attacks.

The two Koreas remain in a technical state of war because the Korean War ended with an armistice, not a peace treaty.

About 28,500 US troops are deployed in South Korea to deter aggression from North Korea.

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