**The first meeting between North and South Korean officials in nearly two years has taken place unexpectedly in the South Korean capital Seoul.**A spy chief said to be close to the North’s leader Kim Jong-il met Seoul’s Unification Minister Hyun In-taek.
Delegates from the North were attending the lying-in-state of the former South Korean President, Kim Dae-jung.
The North recently conducted nuclear tests, but analysts say it now wants better relations on the peninsula.
“I am going to raise inter-Korean issues,” Mr Hyun told reporters before starting discussions with his North Korean counterpart Kim Yang-gon, the official Yonhap news agency reported.
The meeting is the first since conservative President Lee Myung-bak came to power in Seoul in February last year.
Relations have soured since President Lee cut the flow of aid to the North, tying its resumption to nuclear disarmament.
The BBC’s John Sudworth in Seoul says Saturday’s talks may be a signal that North Korea is keen to mend relations with the South after months of rising tension.
In the past few months it has fired a long range rocket over Japanese territory and conducted an underground nuclear test.
Some observers believe that, with UN sanctions beginning to bite, the North is keen to boost cross-border tourism and trade that bring in badly needed foreign currency, our correspondent adds.
On Friday, the six officials from North Korea’s ruling Workers’ Party, wearing black suits and ties, placed a wreath of flowers on the steps of South Korea’s National Assembly, where Kim Dae-jung is lying in state.
Mr Kim - who died on Tuesday at the age of 85 - devoted his presidency to improving relations between the two Koreas, still technically at war.
He reached out to the North with aid - the main thrust of his “Sunshine Policy” that earned him the Nobel Peace Prize in 2000, and held a historic summit with Kim Jong-Il in that year.