Koreas family reunion talks to be held at border

Koreas family reunion talks to be held at border

South Korea says North Korea has accepted its request that talks on reuniting families separated by war be held at a border village.

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South Korea says North Korea has accepted its request that talks on reuniting families separated by war be held at a border village.
 
The two Koreas have agreed to hold the talks on Friday on the southern side of the border village of Panmunjom, Seoul's Unification Ministry official said Thursday. Pyongyang had earlier proposed meeting at Diamond Mountain, a scenic site in North Korea.
 
The president of the International Committee of the Red Cross, Peter Maurer, is visiting the two Koreas to discuss the family reunion and other humanitarian issues. Maurer arrived in Pyongyang for a four-day trip and is to visit Seoul on Sunday.
 
The Unification Ministry says North Korea also proposed another set of talks by early September on resuming lucrative jointly run tours to Diamond Mountain.
 
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.
 
The president of the International Committee of the Red Cross is visiting North and South Korea to discuss proposed reunions of families separated by the Korean War and other humanitarian issues.
 
Peter Maurer arrived in Pyongyang on Tuesday and plans to visit South Korea to speak to officials there on Friday, the same day that has been proposed for both Koreas to meet for working-level talks on the reunions proposal.
 
North Korea agreed to the reunion talks but has also proposed talks on resuming tours to a North Korean resort. South Korea said the issues should be handled separately, and the North hasn't responded to South Korea's proposed delay on discussing the tourism project.
 
Along with discussing the reunions, Maurer was expected to talk about ongoing projects the Red Cross supports in North Korea, including a physical rehabilitation center in Pyongyang and four provincial hospitals.
 
The ICRC has had a permanent presence in North Korea for about 10 years. Maurer is the group's first president to make a combined visit to both countries on the Korean peninsula in 21 years, it said in a statement.
 
South Korean President Park Geun-hye's proposal for a reunion next month of families still separated 60 years after the 1950-53 war was widely seen as an attempt to further ease tensions that escalated earlier this year.
 
Family reunions were a key inter-Korean cooperation project during a period of thawed relations between 2000 and 2010, but they have not been held for three years. About 22,000 Koreans were able to meet in that time. The families were separated by the 1950-53 Korean War, when there were huge movements of refugees between North and South Korea.
 
North Korea appears to be increasingly open to reducing the tensions marked by a North Korean nuclear test, war threats and annual military drills by Seoul and Washington. The Koreas have agreed to move toward reopening a jointly run factory park closed since April, and North Korea's criticism of U.S.-South Korean training exercises this week was milder in tone than its statements on past drills.
 
But analysts say the North often follows provocations and threats with a charm offensive meant to win aid. A similar proposal on the reunions in July fizzled.
 
AP writers Youkyung Lee in Seoul and Eric Talmadge in Tokyo contributed to this report.
 
-Sapa

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