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8.29.2009 N.Korea agrees to restart reunions, free fishermen

AFP
http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5jgaSEdB_bUROvhgn4I2rUb_1sSJQ

SEOUL — North Korea agreed Friday to restart a reunion programme with South Korea for separated families and pledged to free four fishermen, in new moves to ease tensions after more than a year of hostility.
The reunions for families separated since the 1950-53 war will be held from September 26 to October 1, Red Cross officials from the two sides said in a joint statement after three days of talks.
Separately, the North told the South that the fishermen detained for almost a month would be freed at 5:00 pm (0800 GMT) on Saturday along with their boat, Seoul's unification ministry reported.
The boat drifted into the North's east coast waters on July 30 due to a malfunctioning navigation system.
Earlier this month the hardline communist state released a worker it had detained for over four months at a joint industrial estate.
After months of sabre-rattling, including missile launches and a nuclear test which brought tougher United Nations sanctions, the North has made a series of peace overtures to Seoul and Washington.
The reunions will be the first since October 2007.

The North suspended the programme after a conservative South Korean government took office in February 2008 and announced a tougher line on cross-border relations.
"The South and the North will continue to cooperate on the issue of separated families and other humanitarian issues involving the Red Cross," a joint statement said after talks at the North's Mount Kumgang resort, where families will meet.
The North's official news agency said the Koreas will continue talks on humanitarian issues "from the standpoint of developing the inter-Korean relations."
Families will meet just before Korea's Chuseok (Thanksgiving) day.

Yonhap news agency said the South withdrew its demand that the reunions should include some of the South Korean prisoners of war and civilians kidnapped by the North during the Cold War era.
Seoul says 494 of its people, mostly fishermen, were seized in the decades following the war and more than 500 prisoners of war were never sent home in 1953.
Pyongyang insists it is not holding anyone against their will even though some abductees have escaped to the South.
"I believe our position has been sufficiently explained to the North through these talks," unification ministry spokesman Chun Hae-Sung said.
"Here, we will focus on the most pressing issue of arranging the Chuseok reunion, but our efforts will continue with patience."
Seoul dropped demands for the reunions to be held on a regular basis so that many more elderly people can meet loved ones before they die.
The North and South agreed to select 100 people on each side and locate their relatives across the border. The reunions normally last for three days.
Tens of thousands of families have been separated by barbed wire and minefields since the war. There are no civilian mail or telephone services.

The reunion programme began in earnest after the first cross-border summit in 2000. More than 16,000 Koreans from both sides have held face-to-face meetings since then, while 3,200 others communicated through video links.
The North's leader Kim Jong-Il and a visiting Seoul business chief agreed this month reunions should resume. They also agreed to restart tourist trips to the North by South Koreans.
Kim, who last year cut virtually all contacts with the South's government, sent a team to Seoul this month to mourn ex-president Kim Dae-Jung and to hold talks with current leader Lee Myung-Bak.
The North this month pardoned and freed two US reporters after ex-president Bill Clinton visited Pyongyang. It has expressed willingness for talks with Washington to end the nuclear standoff.
US special envoy to North Korea Stephen Bosworth will travel to Asian capitals soon but not to Pyongyang, the State Department said Thursday.

"By setting up the reunion dates, the South and the North virtually reopened their dialogue channel," Kim Yong-Hyun, a North Korea studies professor at Dongguk University, told Yonhap.
"After this good start, inter-Korean relations will certainly turn positive."