Vacillating Relationship

South Korean delegates leave the Headquarters for Inter-Korean Dialogue in Samcheong-dong, central Seoul, on Feb. 5, 2014 for the inter-Korean village of Panmunjom to hold preparatory talks with North Korea on separated family reunions. (Yonhap)
South Korean delegates leave the Headquarters for Inter-Korean Dialogue in Samcheong-dong, central Seoul, on Feb. 5, 2014 for the inter-Korean village of Panmunjom to hold preparatory talks with North Korea on separated family reunions. (Yonhap)

 

SEOUL, Feb. 5 (Yonhap) -- South and North Korea agreed Wednesday to stage reunions later this month for families separated by the 1950-53 Korean War, an official said, a move that could help ease tensions on the Korean Peninsula.

The reunions -- the first since October 2010 -- will be held at Mount Kumgang, a scenic resort on North Korea's east coast, from Feb. 20 to 25, according to the unification ministry official.

The deal is the first sign of progress in improving inter-Korean relations that have worsened due to the North's military threats against the South in recent months.

North Korea's chief delegate Pak Yong-Il said that the Red Cross meeting "is a very important starting point for improving the North-South relations."

Pak made the comments at the beginning of the meeting at the border village of Panmunjom, according to a brief audio file released by the unification ministry, which handles inter-Korean affairs.

The planned reunions coincide with South Korea's annual joint military exercises with Washington, which are set to run from late February through April.

North Korea has pressed South Korea to scrap the drills, condemning them as a rehearsal for a nuclear war against it. Seoul and Washington have vowed to go ahead with the exercises, calling them defensive in nature.

The North had indictated that the reunions could not be held "amid gunfire," referring to the military drills.

South Korea has repeatedly called on the North to hold the reunions, calling them a first step toward improving inter-Korean relations.

Last year, the sides agreed to hold family reunions at Mount Kumgang, but Pyongyang abruptly called them off at the last minute.

Family reunions are a highly emotional issue on the divided peninsula, as most of the separated family members are in their 70s and 80s, and wish to see their long-lost relatives before they die.

There are no direct means of contact between ordinary civilians of the two countries that remain divided by a heavily fortified border.

The divided Koreas have held more than a dozen rounds of reunions since their landmark summit in 2000, bringing together more than 21,700 family members who had not seen each other since the Korean War.

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