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Korea Family Reunion Proposed By North Korea To South Korea

Korea Reunions

KWANG-TAE KIM   09/11/10 01:27 AM ET   AP

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea has offered South Korea a new round of reunions for families separated by the Korean War, state media said Saturday.

Reunions last happened in September and October 2009, and their potential renewal could signal an easing of tensions after the deadly sinking of a South Korean warship in March.

The North proposed that the two Koreas' Red Cross societies meet soon to discuss the gatherings. It proposed the reunions take place at the North's scenic Diamond Mountain on the Chuseok autumn harvest holiday, the North's official Korean Central News Agency reported.

Chuseok, which falls on Sept. 22 this year, is a major holiday for both Koreas, equivalent to Thanksgiving in the United States.

North Korea's Red Cross chief Jang Jae On expressed hope that "humanitarian cooperation between the North and the South would get brisk with the reunion of separated families and their relatives." Jang made the comment in a message sent to his South Korean counterpart on Friday, according to KCNA.

South Korea's Red Cross would consider the North's proposal and consult with the government, according to Kim Seong-keun, a South Korean Red Cross official in charge of inter-Korean cooperation.

The two sides last held Red Cross-brokered reunions for six days around Chuseok holiday in late September and early October last year. So far, more than 20,800 separated families have been reunited through brief face-to-face meetings or by video following a landmark inter-Korean summit in 2000.

Millions of families were separated by the division of the Korean peninsula in 1945 and 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.

The North's offer is the latest in a series of conciliatory gestures by North Korea toward Seoul and Washington.

Last month, North Korea freed an imprisoned American during former President Jimmy Carter's rare trip to Pyongyang. Earlier this week, the North also released a seven-man crew of a South Korean fishing boat seized a month ago in its waters.

The North's overture also came days after flood-stricken North Korea requested a shipment of rice, cement and heavy equipment from South Korea to recover from recent flooding.

Seoul had offered to send aid worth 10 billion won ($8.5 million) despite tensions over the warship sinking that has been blamed on Pyongyang. The North has denied its involvement in the sinking that killed 46 South Korean sailors.

Meanwhile, there is widespread speculation that North leader Kim Jong Il may be preparing to give his youngest son, Kim Jong Un, a key Workers' Party position at the upcoming party conference as part of plans to extend the Kim dynasty into a third generation.

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SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea has offered South Korea a new round of reunions for families separated by the Korean War, state media said Saturday. Reunions last happened in September and Oct...
SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea has offered South Korea a new round of reunions for families separated by the Korean War, state media said Saturday. Reunions last happened in September and Oct...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbmetzger
12:18 PM on 09/15/2010
South Korea: Incheon Landings 60th Anniversary
War veterans attend a ceremony and reenactment display in South Korea to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the amphibious United Nations operation. http://www.newslook.com/videos/250285-south-korea-incheon-landings-60th-anniversary?autoplay=true
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
zxrod
Why don't you?
04:12 PM on 09/13/2010
Aw I'm becomming a big softy.. I like that accompanying picture with this article
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WorldisMorphing
Jaded Iconoclast ...
07:30 PM on 09/13/2010
I confess I'm with you on this one...
... the needless and senseless suffering could not possibly be portrayed more eloquently nor charge a picture more powerfully...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
unami
sonic truth
04:18 PM on 09/12/2010
I hear the roast dog is much better in Seoul then in Pyongyang, so march on.....
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undsoweiter
but I know where to look it up
06:12 PM on 09/12/2010
It's really all in the sauce.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kmuzu
Rolling dem bones
04:03 PM on 09/12/2010
I get the feeling that Mister shortpants Kim is not fully in charge. I wonder how many people will wake up dead before the leadership is established?
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04:07 PM on 09/12/2010
You talking here or North Korea?
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04:01 PM on 09/12/2010
Oh those bastids!
They're only doing this because they want to destroy us!
10:26 PM on 09/12/2010
They hate us for our freedoms...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
glockman
03:32 PM on 09/12/2010
I can't imagine, five decades of separation from your family, those you love, those closer to you than any other living human.

Petty politics and global desire for domination do nothing but destroy the human race in more ways than we can imagine. If humanity wasn't capable of things like art, literature, music, etc., we'd be worthless.
10:28 PM on 09/12/2010
Humanity is so inhumane it boggles the mind.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
glockman
11:26 AM on 09/13/2010
What's even more mind boggling is that sometimes, we're extraordinarily beautiful creatures...when we're not committing wholesale slaughter of each other.
01:51 PM on 09/12/2010
I watched a video several years back about Korean families reuniting after decades of total separation.

It was the saddest video I've ever seen. People slowing coming into the room, looking for their family member, slowly coming together in an embrace, everyone crying.

Man finds new ways to exert cruelty on fellow man - even of their own people.
12:01 PM on 09/13/2010
Heartbreaking! I heard one North Korean school teacher who fled being interviewed - she was asked what the hardest part of her job was - she replied "Watching my pupils starve to death".
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
12:58 PM on 09/12/2010
You see, everyone? Works out a lot better when we behave like adults.

Too bad that millions of idiots in this country STILL want to take aggressive stance when it comes to the situation in Korea.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
glockman
03:33 PM on 09/12/2010
So you think this "good will" gesture means Kim Jong il is suddenly a warm and fuzzy teddy bear?
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
04:02 PM on 09/12/2010
No, I'm just saying that each side needs to engage in a more intelligent dialogue.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Basilio
12:32 PM on 09/12/2010
In my opinion, if North Korea wants money, then they should also be willing to make some economic changes of a gradual nature and increase their middle class and do something about the human rights situation.
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knightoftheroundtable
Old Knight without porfolio or armor
12:09 PM on 09/12/2010
Beware of Greeks bearing gifts. In this case little Kimmy has something up his sleeve again. Amazing how one itzy bitzy little creeepy can control what goes on in this world. Never go to war unless it is to win. If we followed that philosophy little kimmy would not be here, nor would the problems we have from wars not won be haunting us. Little Kimmy, what a waste of an air breather.
11:35 AM on 09/12/2010
What's this going to cost?

North Korea is interested only in money.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
12:56 PM on 09/12/2010
ditto Rethuglicans
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10:08 AM on 09/12/2010
The Great and Powerful Oz went to China last month begging for food and the Chinese turned him down. No he's trying to make up with his neighbors to the south and they honestly could care less. They wanted nukes now let the great leader and his clan eat nukes.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
David Hart
11:03 AM on 09/12/2010
While millions eat weeds and water soup....how humanitarian. I know Kim Jong-il is an evil despot and has spent millions not only on nukes but on his own lavish houses, gardens, and opulent life style. Someday that regime will crumble, and many North Koreans are dependent on rice and foodstuffs from other countries. Many of these people are literally starving to death. Sanctions do nothing to change regimes, they simply punish the poor and those who have nothing. How about a tiny bit of compassion for fellow human beings who are suffering tremendously through no fault of their own.
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11:35 AM on 09/12/2010
Don't get me wrong, I think if we could give ever starving person in DPRK a ball of rice, I would do it in a heartbeat, and 3 times a day at that.

But that's not what happens. The rice goes to the hands of the party officials, and they give it to those who they think are most deserving. That pretty much boils down to party officials and their families.

In Iran, removing sanctions would be a good idea - but in north Korea, it's a totally different situation.
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negogato
Strengthen the Nation with Equal Education.
10:06 AM on 09/12/2010
Any asset. Any asset is exploited for the continuation of control and profit.
Suffering is an asset, and not to be glib: it is renewable.

I recommend anyone see Nancy Heikin's film "Kimjongilia"
This film was at Sundance, and released last year.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YTragUC8AnY&NR=1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QYomWUoFUAM

And like Indonesia in recent times, suspicion or accusation equaled arrest, arrest equaled guilt, and guilt equaled prison on charges that are often never known to the accused or to those who imprison them.
Family members especially children would join their parents or siblings to help them live and survive the work and starvation for the unknown period of imprisonment; these relatives sometimes living for decades in prison with the accused. And at the death or release of the family member, they stayed – being in prison was reason enough not to be released from prison.
I recommend also The Mute's Soliloquy by Pramoedya Ananta Toer
http://www.nytimes.com/books/first/p/pramoedya-soliloquy.html

We have to remember we are America, and our nation was created by people who knew the tyranny of monarchy.
Our constitutional freedoms are born of the knowledge of life without basic rights.

Those in this country who would limit our constitutional freedoms ...
well you finish the sentence.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Donns
09:48 AM on 09/12/2010
I gotta believe that the dear leader gets up on Monday mornings (or whatever day is the first day of the week is in North Korea) and spins a needle on a large disc. Alternate positions around this disc say TRICK or TREAT. Whatever the needle lands on is the official government policy toward South Korea and the outside world this week.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
johnjohn1234
Satire is healthy.
09:43 AM on 09/12/2010
The KCNA will never learn that its highly provocative rhetoric can't be diluted with a few family picnics. They need to learn to be more diplomatic if their people are ever to see a better day.