Kwang-Tae Kim, Associated Press, Seoul, South Korea | Sat, 09/11/2010 1:25 PM
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.