Oman Daily Observer

North, South Korea to hold family reunion in October

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SEOUL: North and South Korea agreed on Tuesday to hold a reunion in October for families separated by the Korean War, following all-night talks between their respective Red Cross branches.

The reunion — only the second to be held in five years — will take place between October 20-26 in North Korea’s Mount Kumgang resort, the South’s Unificatio­n Ministry said.

Seoul was understood to have been pushing for an earlier date — before North Korea celebrates the 70th anniversar­y of the founding of its ruling Worker’s Party on October 10.

Pyongyang is planning a massive military parade and there has been speculatio­n it might also launch a long- range rocket — a move that would trigger fresh UN sanctions and threaten the holding of the reunion.

The Red Cross talks

began

on Monday morning in the border truce village of Panmunjom and, according to the South’s Unificatio­n Ministry, ran through the night with only occasional breaks.

According to the agreement, 100 people will be selected by each side to take part in the week-long event.

The effort to organise a reunion was the product of an accord the two Koreas reached two weeks ago to end a dangerous military standoff and reduce cross-border tensions.

Pyongyang has already accused Seoul of spinning the settlement as a North Korean climbdown, and warned that it would tear up the entire deal — including the family reunion — if the South continued making “wild remarks”.

Millions of people were separated during the 1950-53 Korean War conflict that sealed the division between the two Koreas.

Most died without having a chance to see or hear from their families on the other side of the border, across which all civilian communicat­ion is banned.

About 66,000 South Koreans — many of them in their 80s or 90s — are on the waiting list for an eventual reunion, but only a very limited number can be chosen each time.

The reunion programme began in earnest after a historic North-South summit in 2000, and was initially an annual event. —AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? A man who was separated from his families during the Korean War, checks applicatio­ns for a family reunion programme in Seoul on Tuesday.
— AFP A man who was separated from his families during the Korean War, checks applicatio­ns for a family reunion programme in Seoul on Tuesday.

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