South Korea to reopen all 12 DMZ peace trails this year

The South Korean government announced on April 1 that it will reopen all 12 peace-themed walking routes near the Demilitarized Zone for this year's program. The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism said the DMZ Peace Trail will operate from April 17 to November 30, with a temporary suspension in July and August due to summer heat. Access is limited to South Korean nationals.

The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism announced in a joint press release with related offices that all 12 routes of the DMZ Peace Trail will reopen. The trails span border areas in Incheon, Gyeonggi, and Gangwon provinces, including sections inside the DMZ in Paju, Cheorwon, and Goseong, according to ministry officials.

Created in 2019, the trails offer South Korean citizens a chance to explore the ecological, cultural, and historical significance of the heavily guarded border. Yonhap reported that three routes inside the DMZ had been closed since April 2024 due to heightened tensions with North Korea. The DMZ, 250 kilometers long and 4 kilometers wide, divides the peninsula since the 1950-53 Korean War armistice, leaving the two Koreas technically at war.

Some routes have operated intermittently for security reasons, pausing fully in winter before reopening seasonally. The government plans to expand operating days and participant numbers this year. Registration is required via the official website (www.dmzwalk.com) or Durunubi app, with a fee of 10,000 won ($6.65) per person.

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Historic passenger train crossing Yalu River bridge as China and North Korea resume cross-border rail services after six years.
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China and North Korea resume passenger train services after six years, with first trains crossing border on March 12

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North Korea and China resumed cross-border passenger train services on March 12, 2026, for the first time in six years following a COVID-19 suspension. A five-car train departed China's Dandong for Pyongyang at 10 a.m., while a nine-car train from Pyongyang to Beijing crossed the Yalu River bridge around 4:23 p.m. The services include daily Dandong-Pyongyang routes and Beijing-Pyongyang runs four times weekly, described by officials as a 'dynamic link strengthening friendship' between the nations.

Lt. Gen. Scott Winter, deputy commander of the U.N. Command (UNC), urged prudence in any changes to the control and use of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) separating the two Koreas. He described the armistice as a "proven framework" and warned against undermining it. The remarks come as the U.S.-led UNC objects to bills promoting peaceful use of the military buffer zone.

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The passenger train service between Beijing and Pyongyang, suspended for six years due to the COVID-19 pandemic, is set to resume this week. It will operate four times a week, primarily for diplomats and official travelers. The move signals a gradual reopening of cross-border exchanges between North Korea and China.

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