REPORT
TO THE SIXTH CONGRESS OF
THE
WORKERS’ PARTY OF KOREA ON
THE
WORK OF THE CENTRAL
COMMITTEE(Excerpt)
3. LET US REUNIFY THE COUNTRY
INDEPENDENTLY AND PEACEFULLY
Based on noble ideals and principles laid down in the
July 4 North-South Joint Statement, and taking into consideration the actual
situation in our country in which different ideologies and social systems exist
in north and south, we must seek the shortest and surest way to national
reunification and make positive efforts to reunify the country.
Our Party considers that the most realistic and
reasonable way to reunify the country independently, peacefully and on the
principle of great national unity is to draw the north and the south together
into a federal state, leaving the ideas and social systems existing in the
north and south as they are.
For a long time, ever since liberation, different
social systems have existed and different ideas have prevailed in north and
south. If, in these circumstances, the country is to be reunified through
national union, neither side should regard its own ideology and social system
as absolute. If the north or the south should consider its own ideology and
social system absolute or try to force them on the other side, it will
inevitably lead to confrontation and conflict, and this will lead to the
further aggravation of the state of division. Since the entire people regard
national reunification as the supreme task, the differences in ideology and
system should not be an insurmountable barrier to reunification. People with
different ideas can live in one country, and different social system can
coexist in a unified country. We will never force our ideas and social system
upon south Korea and will surbordinate everything to the interests of national
union and reunification,
Our Party maintains that the country should be
reunified by founding a Federal Republic through the establishment of a unified
national government on the condition that the north and south recognize and
tolerate each other’s ideas and social systems, a government in which the two
sides are represented on an equal footing and under which they exercise
regional autonomy with equal rights and duties.
It will be reasonable if, in the unified state of a
federal type, a supreme national federal assembly is formed with an equal
number of representatives from the nborth and south and an appropriate number
of representatives of overseas nationals; this assembly should also form a
federal standing committee to guide the regional governments of the north and
south and to administer all the affairs of the federal state.
As the unified government of the federal state, the
supreme national federal assembly and the federal standing committee, its
permanent organ, should discuss and decide political affairs, matters of
national defence, foreign affairs and other matters of common concern related
to the interests of the country and the nation as a whole, fairly and in
accordance with the desire for national unity, cooperation and reunification;
they should also promote the coordinated development of the country ad the
nation and realize unity and cooperation between the north and south in all
spheres. The unified government of the federal state should respect the two
social systems, as well as the wishes of the administrative organization, every
party, every group, and every section of the people in the north and south and
prevent one side from imposing its will on the other.
Under the leadership of the federal government, the
regional governments in north and south should follow an independent policy
within limits that are consistent with the fundamental interests and demands of
the whole nation, and strive to narrow down the differences between north and
south in all spheres and to achieve the coordinated development of the country
and the nation.
It would be a good idea to call the federal state the
Democratic Federal Republic of Koryo, after a united state that once existed in
our country and is well known to the world; such a name will also serve to
reflect the common political aspirations of the north and south for democracy.
The DFRK should be a neutral country which does not
join any political-military alliance or bloc. Since the two parts of the
country, north and south, with different ideas and social systems are to be
united to form a single federal state, it is necessary and most reasonable for
the DFRK to be a neutral state.
The DFRK, as a united state embracing the whole
territory and all the people of our country, should pursue a policy which
accords with the fundamental interests and demands of the entire Korean people.
Our Party deems it appropriate that the DFRK should
put forward and carry out the following policy:
First, the DFRK should adhere to independence in all
state activities and pursue an independent policy.
Independence is the basic mark of an independent
state; it is the lifeblood of the country and the nation. Only when a state
exercises sovereignty with firm independence in its activities can it uphold
the dignity and honour of the nation and ensure the development and prosperity
of the country in keeping with the desires of the people.
The DFRK should be a fully independent and sovereign
state and a non-aligned nation which is not a satellite of any other nation and
does not depend on any foreign forces.
The DFRK should oppose all forms of foreign
interference and dependence on foreign forces, exercise complete sovereignty in
its internal and external activities and settle all questions arising in state
politics independently in keeping with the fundamental interests of the Korean
nation and the actual situation in our country.
Second, the DFRK should effect democracy throughout
the country and in all areas of society and promote great national unity.
Democracy is a common political idea desirable for and
acceptable to people with differing thoughts and political views, and is a
noble right due to people from all walks of life as masters of the state and
society.
The DFRK should develop a full democratic social and
political system which opposes dictatorship and intelligence politics and
firmly guarantees and defends the freedoms and rights of the people.
The federal state should guarantee freedom to form
political parties and social organizations and their freedom of action, freedom
of religious belief, speech, the press, assembly and demonstration, and
guarantee the rights of the people in north and south to travel freely across
the country and to conduct political, economic and cultural activities freely
in any area.
The federal government should pursue a fair policy
which will guarantee equality between the interests of the two regions, two
systems, diffent parties, groups, classes and circles in the country without
bias towards either side. All the policies pursued by the federal government
should proceed from the principle of great national unity and contribute to the
uniform development and prosperity of the country through the strengthening of
national unity and cooperation.
The federal government should not question the past
records of any of the organizations or individuals in the north or the south
that work for the development of the unified state, but should join hands with
them, and should not allow any form of political reprisal or persecution.
Third, the DFRK should effect economic cooperation and
exchange between north and south and ensure the development of an independent
national economy.
In the two parts of our country there is a wealth of
natural resources that can still be exploited and also the economic foundations
that have been built in the past. If, once the country is reunified, the north
and the south develop their natural resources jointly and use their existing
economic foundations effectively through cooperation and mutual assistance, our
national economy will be able to develop at a very rapid pace, and our people
will all be able to enjoy as good a life as any other people.
Economic cooperation and exchange between north and
south should be realized on the basis of recognizing the different economic
systems and diverse economic activities of enterprises in the two parts of the
country. The federal government should recognize and protect state, cooperative
and private property in the north and south as well as personal effects, and
refrain from restricting or encroaching upon the property of capitalists and
their business activities as long as they help develop the national economy and
do not engage in monopolist or comprador activities.
The federal state should ensure that the north and the
south jointly develop and exploit mineral, marine and other natural resources,
and further the division of labour and promote trade extensively on the
principles of cooperation and mutual accommodation, while coordinating the
economic activities of all production units and enterprises in keeping with the
interests of the various classes and circles. It would be advisable for the
authorities and enterprises in the north and south to set up and operate joint
companies, common markets and the like rationally.
The federal state should, through extensive
cooperation and exchange between the two parts of the country,m develop the
economies of the north and south to make them an organically interlinked
independent national economy.
Fourth, the DFRK should realize north-south exchange
and cooperation in the spheres of science, culture and education and ensure the
uniform progress of the country’s science and technology, national culture and
arts, and national education.
Our people have time-honoured, glorious cultural
traditions. Resourceful and talented, our nation has, since olden times,
admirably developed science, technology, culture and arts. Since liberation,
large numbers of able scientists and technicians, as well as talented cultural
workers and artists, have grown up in the northern and southern parts of our
country. If they pool their efforts and talents through exchange and
cooperation, our science and technology, national culture and arts will
flourish even more brilliantly.
The federal state should ensure that scientists and
technicians in the north and south undertake scientific research jointly and
exchange their experience and achievements on a wide scale so that science and
technology in our country develop rapidly.
The federal state should actively encourage exchange
and cooperation between artists and sportsmen from the north and south and
ensure that the scientists in the two halves together uncover and protect the
cultural heritage of our nation and that they study and develop our unique
written and spoken language. If this is done, our national culture and arts
will flourish to the full and the unique characteristics of our people as a
homogeneous nation will be preserved.
Education is a very important undertaking which
decides the fate of the nation. The federal government should train large numbers
of able technical experts and steadily raise the cultural and intellectual levels
of the entire people by developing a popular education system and giving active
state and social support to educational work.
Fifth, the DFRK should reopen transport and
communications links between the north and south and ensure the free use of the
means of transport and communications all across the country.
Transport and communications represent the arteries
and nervous system of the country. Because the territory has been divided in
two and transport and communications have been severed, our people cannot seeor
hear from their families and relatives, although they live within easy reach. This
is a tragedy. Restoring transport and communicationsl links between the north
and south is the only way to end the national tragedy and realize full
political, economic and cultural exchange and cooperation.
The federal state should restore the railways and
roads linking the north and the south and open shipping and air routes to
ensure free travel by land, sea and air between the two halves of the country. In
addition, steps should be taken to open telegraph and telephone services as
well as an unrestricted postal service covering all areas of the north and the
south.
The federal government should ensure that the north
and the south jointly use the transport system and telegraph facilities and
postal services and, in addition, gradually move towards running them jointly
so that in the future one transport and communications system will exist across
the whole country.
Sixth, the DFRK should ensure a stable livelihood for
the entire people including the workers, peasants and other working masses and
promote their welfare systematically.
The working masses are the masters of the state and
society and the creators of all material wealth. Guaranteeing a stable life for
the working people and steadily promoting their well-being should be the most
important principle in the activities of a democratic state which serves the
people, and this is also a duty to the nation devolving on the unified
government.
In all its activities the federal state should give
priority to stabilizing the lives of the people from all social strata
including the workers, peasants and other sections of the working people and to
promoting their welfare. It should ensure a decent life for everyone by
guaranteeing adequate living conditions for the entire working people with
regard to food, clothing and shelter and by raising the living standards of the
poor to those of the middle class.
The federal state should provide work for all
able-bodied people, ensure adequate conditions for work and rest and introduce
a wage system a price policy and an equitable tax system so as to guarantee a
stable livelihood for the working people. Steps should be taken for different
enterprises, including small and medium-sized ones, to conduct production
activities on a normal basis in order to ensure the working people’s livelihood
and, in particular, the state should give active support to the poor peasants
and fishermen, small merchants and handicraftsmen in their work.
The federal state should pay close attention to the
education of the working people and the improvement of health services for them
and adopt adequate measures to this end, so that all working people and their
families can receive an education and medical treatment.
Seventh, the DFRK should remove the state of military
confrontation between the north and south and form a combined national army to
defend the nation against invasion.
Military confrontation between the huge armed forces
of the north and south gives rise to misunderstanding, mistrust and discord and
is a threat to peace.
The federal state should reduce the military strength
of the two sides to 100,000-150,000 men each in order to end the state of
military confrontation between north and south and bring fratricidal strife to
an end once and for all. At the same time, it is essential to abolish the
Military Demarcation Line between north and south, dismantle all military
installations in its vicinity, dissolve militia organizations in both halves of
the country and prohibit the military training of civilians.
The federal state should amalgamate the Korean People’s
Army and the “National Army” of south Korea
and form a single combined national army. As the national army of the unified
state independent of either side, north or south, the combined national army
should undertake the duty of national defense under the unified leadership of
the federal government. All costs incurred in a maintaining the combined
national army and in defending the country should be borne jointly by the north
and the south.
Eighth, the DFRK should defend and protect the
national rights and interests of all overseas Koreans.
Many of our Korean compatriots are living abroad. As their
motherland, the DFRK should assume the responsibility and duty of defending and
protecting their national rights and interests.
The DFRK should make vigorous efforts to enable all Korean
nationals living abroad to enjoy their internationally accepted legal rights
and liberties, and give them strong support and encouragement in their struggle
for democratic national rights.
Ninth, the DFRK should deal properly with the foreign
relations established by the north and the south prior to reunification, and
should coordinate the foreign activities of the two regional governments in a
unified manner.
It is only when the foreign relations built up by the
north and the south prior to national reunification are conducted in the right
manner that it will be possible to ensure both the interests of the nation as a
whole and the interests of the two halves of the country within the framework
of the unified state and to enable the federal state to develop friendly
relations with the various countries of the world on an equitable footing. Furthermore,
in view of the fact that even after reunification the north and the south will
maintain separate foreign relations with other nations on a limited scale, the
federal government will need to coordinate the foreign activities of the two
regional governments properly in a unified manner.
The DFRK should repeal all the treaties and agreements
with other countries that are detrimental to national unity, including military
treaties concluded separately by the north and the south prior to
reunifications. Of the foreign relations established by the north and the
south, those relations, economic relations included, that do not run counter to
the common interests of the nation should be maintained.
The federal state should permit the north and the
south to cooperate economically with other countries irrespective of the social
system of the country involved. It should leave intact the capital invested by
other nations in south Korea prior to the reunification of the country and
continue to guarantee the concessions of these countries.
The DFRK should permit the governments of the two
halves of the country to establish bilateral relations with other countries. The
federal state will have to coordinate the foreign relations of the north and
the south properly to make sure that the two regional governments act
consistently with each other in their foreign activities.
Tenth, the DFRK should, as a unified state representing
the whole nation, develop friendly relations with all the countries of the
world and pursue a peaceful foreign policy.
The DFRK should b ethe only representative of the
entire Korean nation in its foreign relation. The federal state should
represent the entire Korean nation at the United Nations and in other
international organizations and must send a single delegation to all
international gatherings where the whole nation is to be represented.
The DFRK should adhere to the line of neutrality,
follow the policy of non-alignemnt and develop friendly relations with all
nationsl on the principles of independence, noninterference in internal
affairs, equality, mutual benefit and peaceful coexistence. In particular, it
should actively develop neighbourly relations with the countries surrounding
ours.
The DFRK should be a peace-loving nation and pursue a
peaceful foreign policy. A unified Korea will not threaten aggression against
the countires neighbouring ours or any other nations of the world and will not be
a party to or cooperate in any international act of aggression. The federal
state should make the Korean peninsula a permanent peace zone and nuclear-free
zone. To this end, it should ban the presence of foreign troops and foreign
military bases on its territory and prohibit the manufacture, introduction and
use of nuclear weapons.
The ten-point policy for the DFRK accurately reflects
the common aspiration and demands of the entire Korean nation and illuminates
the road ahead for a unified Korea.
The plan for national reunification and the ten-point
political programme for the unified state proposed by our Party on the occasion
will win the active support and approval of all the Korean people and will be
warmly welcomed by the people of the world.
Our Party will make every effort to put the new plan
for national reunification into effect as soon as possible and so satisfy the
ardent desires of our 50 million brethren to live happily in a unified
homeland.
In order to ound a Federal Republic and achieve
national reunification as proposed by our Party, all Korean nationals, in the
north and south and abroad, should fight, rallied closely together to form a
great national united front under the banner of national reunification,
regardless of any differences in ideology, social system, party affiliation or
political views.
The road ahead of our Party and people in their
struggle for the country’s independent and peaceful reunification is still
beset with many difficulties and obstacles. But we will, without fail, overcome
them and ultimately accomplish the historic cause of national reunification
through the united efforts of the whole nation.
When the DFRK is founded and the country is reunified
through the unity of the whole nation and cooperation between the north and
south, our country will be able to make its appearance in the world arena with
great dignity and authority as an independent and sovereign state with a
population of 50 million, brilliant national culture and a strong national
economy, and an ever-prosperous people’s paradise will have been established in
our land of three thousand ri.
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