Monday, September 7, 2015

S. Korea, DPRK continue marathon talks for family reunion

SEOUL, Sept. 8 (Xinhua) -- South Korea and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) continued their dialogue early Tuesday as talks for the reunion of Korean families separated by the 1950-53 Korean War lasted for more than 14 hours.


Three delegates from each side launched the working-level Red Cross talks at about 10:50 a.m. local time Monday (0150 GMT) at the border truce village of Panmunjom. The marathon talks stretched into late night as of 1 a.m. Tuesday (1600 GMT Monday), an official at Seoul's unification ministry told Xinhua.

It was unusually prolonged as the working-level contact for the latest family reunion event, held in February 2014, ended in about four hours.

The Red Cross talks for family reunion came after top military officials of the two Koreas agreed in late August to defuse tensions caused by the exchange of fire and a landmine blast. The high-level talks had lasted for more than 40 hours.

South Korean chief delegate Lee Deok-haeng, executive committee member of Korean Red Cross, smilingly shook hands with his DPRK counterpart, indicating a bright outlook for the working-level dialogue, according to photos distributed by the unification ministry.

The talks were allegedly focused on the timing and venue for the reunion event, and differences emerged over when to hold it.

The South Korean side called for the humanitarian event to be held before the 70th anniversary of the founding of the Workers' Party of Korea (WPK) on Oct. 10. The DPRK side claimed that it be held after the founding ceremony.

During the meeting, South Korea also called for regularly holding the reunion event, exchanging the list of all separated families who are alive, and allowing the families to exchange letters and hold video reunion.

Since the Korean War ended with an armistice in 1953, the two Koreas has technically remained in a state of war and the exchange of letters and telephone calls have been banned.

Almost half of about 130,000 South Koreans, who had applied for a reunion since 1988, passed away without a chance to meet their long-lost relatives.
  xinhuanet.com

7-8/9/15
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1 comment:

  1. North, South Korea agree to hold family reunions in October: South...

    Families torn apart by the Korean War six decades ago are to reunite briefly near the heavily fortified border of North and South Korea next month under a deal reached between the two sides on Tuesday, according to a statement from the South.

    The agreement to hold reunions, which would be the first since 170 families embraced in emotional scenes in February last year, follows the negotiated end to a recent armed confrontation across the border.

    "The South and the North shared the view that we will work to fundamentally resolve humanitarian issues," the South's Unification Ministry said, quoting from the agreement which followed almost 24 hours of talks between Red Cross officials from both sides at the border village of Panmunjom.

    The reunions will be held from Oct. 20 to 26 at Mount Kumgang resort just north of the border, where previous reunions have been held, with 100 participants from each country...........reuters.com

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