Deutsche Welle, 23 august 2013
North and
South Korea have agreed to hold reunions September 25-30 for families separated
by the 1950-53 War. They will take place the North's Mount Kumgang resort,
South Korea's Unification Ministry announced.
´
North and
South Korea held talks Friday on resuming the reunions for families separated
for decades by the 1950-53 war as they seek to build on a recent easing of
cross-border tensions. The last reunions had been held in November 2010
(pictured), before being suspended after the North's shelling of a South Korean
border island.
"With
today's agreement, we set the stage for regular family reunions," said Kim
Hyung-Suk, the spokesman for South Korea's Unification Ministry.
A venue
dispute nearly derailed the talks between North and South Korean Red Cross
officials, but they ultimately took place in the border "truce"
village of Panmunjom, where the two countries had also signed the 1953
ceasefire ending hostilities.
'Separated
families'
The war and
the border it left behind separated millions of Koreans, and most have now died
without having had a chance to see again the family members they last saw six
decades ago. Last week, South Korean President Park Geun-Hye began pushing to
restart the reunions, appealing to the North to "open its heart" and
agree to kick-start the program in time for September's Chuseok holiday.
"The
issue of separated families is one of the most urgent tasks of the time,"
said South Korea's top delegate at the talks Friday, Lee Duck Hang. "I
will do my best to relieve their pain," he was quoted as saying by the
Yonhap news agency.
The program
began in 2000 following an historic inter-Korean summit, and sporadic events
since then have seen around 17,000 people briefly reunited. About 72,000 South
Koreans - nearly half of them aged over 80 - remain on the wait-list to join
the highly competitive family reunion events, which only a few hundred Koreans
might attend at a time.
At the reunions,
Koreans typically meet in the North for two or three days. For those unable to
travel, the countries have arranged reunions via video conferencing.
mkg/dr (AFP, dpa, AP)

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