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Business News/ News / World/  North Korea postpones war-torn family unions with South
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North Korea postpones war-torn family unions with South

Seoul condemns Pyongyang’s postponement as ‘inhumane’

A file photo of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un and his wife Ri Sol-Ju. Photo: Reuters (Reuters)Premium
A file photo of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un and his wife Ri Sol-Ju. Photo: Reuters
(Reuters)

Seoul: North Korea on Saturday ordered the indefinite postponement of a scheduled series of reunions for families divided since the 1950-53 Korean War, dealing a setback to months of efforts to improve relations between the neighbours.

Six days of meetings between family members still separated six decades after the war had been due to start on Wednesday in the Mount Kumgang resort, just north of the militarised border.

They had been seen as an element in furthering months of thaw in chilled relations compounded by the North’s refusal to abandon its nuclear programme, described as its “treasured sword".

South Korea said the pullout by Pyongyang “broke the hearts" of Koreans grieving for relatives they were unable to see.

The North’s Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea, in a statement carried by the KCNA news agency, accused the South of poisoning dialogue. It said it could never tolerate Seoul misusing such dialogue to heighten conflicts.

“The reunions of separated families and relatives between the North and the South will be postponed until there can be a normal atmosphere where dialogue and negotiations can be held," said a spokesman for the committee, which oversees ties with South Korea.

The reunions would have been the first in nearly three years.

North Korea also said it was putting off planned talks on resuming tours of Mount Kumgang, suspended after a North Korean guard shot dead a South Korean tourist in 2008. The talks had been set for 2 October.

South Korea’s unification ministry said North Korea’s change of heart was “very regrettable".

“North Korea should be criticised for its inhumane behaviour that broke the hearts of all families separated by the war and of all South Koreans in general," ministry spokesman Kim Eui-do told a briefing.

No travel or communications

The neighbours remain technically at war as the 1950-53 war ended in an armistice rather than a peace treaty. The conflict left millions of families divided, with travel across the border all but impossible and nearly all forms of communication barred.

The abrupt announcement upended an easing of tensions in recent months.

The two sides this week reopened a shuttered jointly-run industrial complex just inside the North, shut down by Pyongyang authorities during weeks of high tension in April.

Yang Moo-jin, a professor at the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul, said authorities in Pyongyang were trying seeking to secure more concessions from the South, a recurring tactic used by the North. Concessions on this occasion, he said, were aimed particularly at lucrative tourism to Mount Kumgang.

“This is intended to urge the South Korean government to give a clear stance on Mount Kumgang tours," said Yang. “For North Korea, the tours come first and family reunions come later. It is the opposite for South Korea."

At the height of the tensions in April, North Korea issued daily threats to engulf both South Korea and its ally, the United States, in a nuclear war in response to new UN sanctions against Pyongyang.

The Security Council adopted the punitive measures after the North conducted its third nuclear test in February.

The North also denounced weeks of joint South Korean military exercises with the United States.

Tensions have since waned, although a US research institute and a US official this month said that satellite imagery suggested North Korea had restarted a research reactor at its Yongbyon nuclear complex. REUTERS

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Published: 21 Sep 2013, 02:20 PM IST
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