Once hailed as vanguards of reconciliation but now threatened by simmering animosity between the Koreas, a group of South Korean businessmen pleaded Thursday with senior lawmakers to safeguard their operations in North Korea against further political fallout.
Since North Korea mounted a deadly artillery attack on the South Korean island of Yeonpyeong on Nov. 23, these seasoned businessmen have had jitters over the fate of their factories built in the western North Korean border town of Kaesong.
Considered the last remaining symbol of reconciliation between the divided countries, the joint industrial complex houses more than 120 South Korean firms employing 44,000 North Korean workers.
Holding a commercial fair at the National Assembly, representatives from eight companies and officials from their association mingled with two dozen lawmakers and scrambled to tout their products as bearing the messages of hope and peace.
"We have achieved a level of quality that enables us to compete with any other industrial complexes in the world," Bae Hae-dong, chief of the association of South Korean factories, said in a speech. "Yet, we remain easily affected by inter-Korean political circumstances. We especially deplore the situation that has arisen since North Korea attacked Yeonpyeong."
The shelling of the small fishing community killed two marines and two civilians in the most indiscriminate attack on South Korean soil since the 1950-53 Korean War that ended in a truce.
A travel ban imposed on North Korea a day after the attack remains in place, allowing only a limited amount of raw materials to be sent to Kaesong and hamstringing manufacturing operations there.
"We are suffering a 10-15 percent decline in production due to the ban," said Kim Ssang-kyu, general manager at Pyxis Inc., which produces jewelry cases and other accessories.
Sung Hyun-sang, president of Mansung Corp., which makes women's clothing, claimed the damage in production amounts to as much as 50 percent.
"We understand the ban is for the sake of our safety, but we're sure the North Koreans won't hurt us. They know how important we are" to their
cash-strapped economy, Sung said.
"We can only worry and pray for now," an official at Shinwon, which produces men's suits, said, asking not to be named because his remark could be taken sensitively.
About 410 South Koreans remained in Kaesong as of Thursday, a drop from 760 on Nov. 23 when the artillery exchange erupted between the Koreas,
according to the Unification Ministry in Seoul.
The Kaesong complex produced its first articles -- kitchen pans -- in 2004 even though the two Koreas had agreed four years earlier on the project in an effort to lessen border tension.
Combining South Korean capital and know-how with the cheap labor in North Korea, the park recently reached a total of US$1 billion in production.
Supporters of the estate say its significance goes far beyond economic benefits.
"Kaesong has been a safety pin whenever the security on the Korean Peninsula sagged to a dangerous level," Kim Choong-whan, a legislator with the ruling conservative Grand National Party (GNP), said in a speech.
Park Joo-sun, who is with the liberal Democratic Party (DP) and sponsored the fair, expressed hope that the park will survive the crisis sparked by the North's shelling.
The fair was scheduled before the crisis, organizers said. The lawmakers who attended it included Park Jie-won, a DP lawmaker who led the organization of the 2000 summit, and Lee Sang-deuk, President Lee Myung-bak's older brother who is a GNP legislator.
"Sir, please help us," Bae told the influential lawmaker touring the booths set up at the fair.
Gently embracing Lee with his arm in a show of friendship, another businessman smiled widely and whispered to Lee, "This is the lifeline of
peace."