SEOUL, South Korea - Hundreds of North and South Koreans held tearful
reunions via video Tuesday as part of revived reconciliation efforts on the
divided peninsula after North Korea agreed to start dismantling its
nuclear weapons program.
A screen shows a North
Korean father Kim Hae Dong, 78, left, talking to his South Korean daughter
Kim Ki-jo, center, and his South Korean relatives, right, through video
during a video family reunion session at the video conferencing room of
Red Cross in Busan, south of Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, March 27, 2007.
South and North Korea on Tuesday held a new round of three days family
reunions via video link after a 13-month hiatus. [AP]
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The reunions come weeks
after the two sides agreed at high-level talks to put their relations back on
track after they soured last year following the North's missile and nuclear
tests.
Millions of Korean families were separated following the division of the
Korean peninsula in 1945 and the 1950-53 Korean War. There is no direct mail,
telephone service or other form of communication between ordinary citizens
across the border, as the two Koreas remain technically at war.
The North halted the reunions last year after Seoul suspended its regular aid
to Pyongyang after a series of missile tests.
Some 865 people from 120 families are participating in this week's virtual
reunions, which are scheduled to last for three days. Each family will be given
two hours to see and talk to their relatives via a fiber-optic video cable.
"I am glad to see you," said Jung Tae Young, 48, as he glimpsed his
65-year-old South Korean aunt Jung Sam-ok on Tuesday for the first time since
the Korean War.
Jung and his South Korean relatives shared family pictures and asked each
other about life on the other side of the peninsula.
Han Wan-sang, head of the South's Red Cross society, called on his North
Korean counterpart to help the separated families by regularly holding reunions.
"Pains caused by division are enormous," Han told his North Korean
counterpart, Jang Jae On, noting the urgency for the meetings because many
seeking to see relatives are elderly.
Some 32,000 South Koreans died in the past decade without seeing long-lost
relatives from the North, according to the South's Red Cross.
The two Koreas also plan to resume face-to-face family reunions at the
North's Diamond Mountain resort in May, the 15th such scheduled since a 2000
summit between the leaders of North and South that launched their historic
reconciliation. So far, more than 14,500 Koreans have met in such reunions.
The reunions coincided with a batch of resumed fertilizer shipments to the
impoverished North in the wake of its agreement last month to shut down its main
nuclear reactor by mid-April.