Seoul to keep seeking dialogue with Pyongyang over slain official: minister

Unification Minister Lee In-young speaks during a parliamentary audit session for Foreign Affairs and Unification Committee at the National Assembly in Seoul's Yeouido, Friday. Yonhap
Unification Minister Lee In-young said Friday that South Korea will keep seeking "dialogue" with North Korea to figure out exactly what happened to a South Korean official shot and killed by the North last month.
Lee made the remark during a parliamentary audit session in response to a lawmaker's question as to how the government will draw cooperation from the North on the deadly incident at a time when Pyongyang remains unresponsive to Seoul's calls for a joint probe.
"We will have to find a method to smoothly resolve the issue through dialogue," Lee said.
The 47-year-old official was fatally shot by the North Korean military on Sept. 22 while adrift in North Korean waters. South Korea earlier claimed that North Korean soldiers shot him dead and burned his body.
North Korea swiftly apologized for the incident but denied setting his body ablaze, claiming that what their soldiers burned was his belongings and that his body went missing.
South Korea has called for a joint investigation with the North into the incident, but Pyongyang has not responded. Seoul is trying to search for the missing body.
Lee Rae-jin, right, the elder brother of a South Korean official who was shot dead by the North Korean military in the North's territorial waters late September, speaks at the National Assembly during the main opposition People Power Party's own "audit" of the government, Sunday. PPP lawmakers, including floor leader Rep. Joo Ho-young, left, arranged the event without members of the ruling Democratic Party of Korea (DPK) after the DPK objected on calling Lee as a witness for the ongoing annual audit by the Assembly. Yonhap
"It is something that we will never give up ― to retrieve his body and bring it back to his family," Lee said.
Lee also stressed the importance of maintaining "close cooperation" with the United States and "responding swiftly" to its new policies regardless of who wins the upcoming U.S. presidential elections.
He pointed out that Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden may not necessarily return to former President Barack Obama's policy of "strategic patience" toward North Korea if he is elected as president.
"If Biden wins the election, there is a possibility the new administration will be a 'third Clinton term' instead of a 'third Obama term,'" he said.
Lee appears to be referring to former President Bill Clinton's policy of engaging North Korea as opposed to the Obama administration's approach of "strategic patience," which centered on waiting for Pyongyang to return to the negotiating table while keeping sanctions and pressure in place.
"We will stay prepared to respond to any situation no matter the results of the upcoming November elections," he added. (Yonhap)