Yahoo – AFP,
Lim Chang-Won, 19 Oct 2015
Almost 400 South Koreans -- many of them elderly, some in wheelchairs, all in a state of nervous anticipation -- gathered Monday before crossing into North Korea for a rare and emotional reunion with separated family members.
Almost 400 South Koreans -- many of them elderly, some in wheelchairs, all in a state of nervous anticipation -- gathered Monday before crossing into North Korea for a rare and emotional reunion with separated family members.
The reunion
beginning Tuesday in the North Korean resort of Mount Kumgang will be only the
second in the past five years -- the result of an agreement the two Koreas
reached in August to ease tensions that had pushed them to the brink of armed
conflict.
Millions of
people were displaced by the sweep of the 1950-53 Korean War, which saw the
frontline yo-yo from the south of the Korean peninsula to the northern border
with China and back again.
![]() |
Tens of
millions of people were displaced
by the 1950-53 Korean War, which also
saw brothers and sisters, parents and
children, husbands and wives separated
(AFP Photo/Jung Yeon-Je)
|
"We
were separated at the beginning of the war when I was just nine years
old," Choi Kum-Sun, 75, said of her elder brother in the North.
"I had
no idea that he was still alive, but then I got the notification that he wanted
to see me. I still can't believe it," she wept.
Like a
significant number of the elderly or infirm participants, Choi was in a
wheelchair. She told AFP she had packed clothes, food and US$1,000 in cash to
take as a gift.
- Six
decades of separation -
Because the
conflict ended with an armistice rather than a peace treaty, the two Koreas
technically remain at war and direct exchanges of letters or telephone calls
are banned.
The reunion
programme began in earnest after a historic North-South summit in 2000, but the
numbers clamouring for a chance to take part have always far outstripped those
actually selected.
The 394
people gathered in Sokcho city on South Korea's northeast coast were called to
the reunion by 100 North Koreans chosen to take part in the event.
![]() |
North and
South Korean family members have a total of just 12 hours to mitigate
the
trauma of more than six decades of separation in their upcoming reunions
(AFP
Photo/Ed Jones)
|
All were to
spend the night in a local resort before an early start to the
heavily-fortified border nearby and then on to Mount Kumgang.
Over the
next three days, they will sit down with their North Korean relatives six times
-- both in private and in public.
With more
than 65,000 South Koreans currently on the waiting list for a reunion spot,
they represent the lucky few, although the event itself is very bitter-sweet.
Each
interaction only lasts two hours, meaning the family members have a total of
just 12 hours to mitigate the trauma of more than six decades of separation.
And for
those in their 80 and 90s, the final farewell on Thursday after three days is
tainted by the near-certainty that there will never be another meeting.
"I
have mixed feelings," said 90-year-old Hong Rok-Ja who, together with her
sister, was going to meet her brother who had gone missing in 1950.
"Of
course I want to see him, but I'm so worried I won't recognise him or that I'll
be too excited to say anything," Hong said.
![]() |
Approximately
400 South Koreans, many
of them elderly, are due to cross into
North Korea for
a rare reunion with
separated family members (AFP
Photo/Ed Jones)
|
Kim Nyun-O,
85, confessed to being so over-excited that she had to take a mild sedative in
the morning before travelling to Sokcho.
She came
with her three sisters for a meeting with their brother who had been drafted
into the North Korean army in 1951.
"We
were so shocked to find out he was still alive. Shocked but incredibly
happy," Kim said.
After
arriving at the resort in Sokcho, the family members were given an
"orientation session" by South Korean officials to prepare them for
the next three days.
Pyongyang
has a lengthy track record of manipulating the divided families' issue for
political purposes, refusing proposals for regular reunions and cancelling
scheduled events at the last minute over some perceived slight.
After the
last reunion, in February 2012, some South Koreans complained that their
Northern relatives had felt obliged to deliver lengthy political sermons
parroting Pyongyang's official propaganda.
Others said
they seemed more interested in what gifts the South Koreans had brought than in
talking about their family history or catching up with the last 60 years.




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