S Korea wants regular reunions of divided families
August 28, 2009 00:00:00
Kim Young-chol, chief delegate and secretary general of the South Korean Red Cross office, left, shakes hand with his North Korean counterpart Choe Song Ik upon his arrival at the Diamond Mountain, North Korea, Wednesday. — AP
SEOUL, Aug 27 (AP): South Korea is proposing regular reunions of families separated by the Korean War during meetings between officials of the two Koreas held this week amid signs of easing tension on the peninsula, a spokesman said Thursday.
The three days of talks, which opened at North Korea's Diamond Mountain resort Wednesday, come as the communist regime adopts a more conciliatory stance toward South Korea and the US after months of animosity over its nuclear and missile programmes.
Earlier this month, the North said it would restart some joint projects including temporary reunions of separated families, which have been stalled since the inauguration of a conservative government in South Korea about 18 months ago. Seoul officials said they considered the moves "positive" but that government-level talks were necessary before implementing them.
On the first day of talks, officials expressed hope that their meeting would help improve inter-Korean relations, though they were still at odds over the timing of the reunion, according to South Korean media pool reports.
Seoul wants them to be held in two stages in late September and early October, while the North demanded that both stages be held in early October, close to the Chuseok autumn harvest holiday, the reports said.
Chuseok, which falls on October 3, is a major holiday for both Koreas, equivalent to Thanksgiving in the United States.
South Korean officials also proposed that the two Koreas hold more family reunions on a regular-basis and allow divided families to confirm whether their long-lost kin are still alive in a "full-fledged manner," according to Unification Ministry spokesman Chun Hae-sung. He said the North now wants to hold a one-time reunion on Chuseok.
Millions of families remain separated following the 1950-53 Korean War, which ended with a cease-fire, not a peace treaty, leaving the two countries technically at war. There are no mail, telephone or e-mail exchanges between ordinary citizens across the Korean border.
A landmark inter-Korean summit in 2000 paved the way for about 20,000 Koreans to temporarily reunite with relatives. The reunions were held annually but were suspended as North Korea cut off most ties in protest of South Korean President Lee Myung-bak's hard-line policy toward Pyongyang.