Koreans separated for more than 50 years reunite
By KWANGTAE KIM,Associated Press Writer - Sunday, September 27
SEOUL, South Korea – Lee Dong-un cried and held the hands of his 60-year-old North Korean daughter Saturday during their first meeting in more than half a century. They were one of hundreds of families reuniting as part of a program revived by Pyongyang in an effort to ease tensions with South Korea.
The meeting was bittersweet for Lee, who left behind his pregnant wife and daughter, then 2 years old, in North Korea when he fled to the South during the Korean War. The 84-year-old burst into tears after his daughter told him his pregnant wife was killed when a bomb fell on her North Korean town.
"I always thought about you. I've never dreamed that we could meet," the elder Lee said, according to South Korean media pool reports. No foreign journalists were invited to the reunions.
The reunions are the first between the divided countries in nearly two years. Pyongyang suspended the program in 2007 in retaliation for conservative South Korean President Lee Myung-bak's get-tough policy toward the North.
The resumption of the program is widely seen as the North's latest olive branch toward rival South Korea. In recent weeks Pyongyang has reached out to Seoul by freeing five detained South Koreans, agreeing to "energize" a troubled joint industrial project, and restarting suspended tours for South Koreans to the North.
"North Korea appears to be aiming to use the humanitarian project as a way to restore bilateral relations," said Koh Yu-hwan, a North Korea expert at Seoul's Dongguk University.
Lee Dong-un was among about 200 families from both sides scheduled to hold six days of reunions with relatives they have not seen since the war ended in an armistice, not a peace treaty, in 1953, leaving the countries divided. The last reunions were held in October 2007.
More than 120 South Koreans, most in their 70s or older, arrived at the Diamond Mountain resort on North Korea's east coast on Saturday for the reunions, according to the Unification Ministry handling inter-Korean affairs.
Millions of families remain separated following the Korean peninsula's division in 1945 and the ensuing civil war. There are no mail, telephone or e-mail exchanges between ordinary citizens from the two Koreas, and they can't travel to the other side of the peninsula without government approval.
The meetings are a highly emotional issue in the Koreas because most of those applying for the chance to see their long lost loved ones are in their 70s or older, and are eager for a reunion before they die.
Of 127,400 South Koreans who have applied since 1988, nearly 40,000 have already died, according to South Korea's Red Cross.
The reunions, which began in 2000 following a landmark inter-Korean summit, last through Oct. 1 and it remains unclear when they may be held again.
For some, the reunions brought back painful memories.
"You said that you will be back soon after visiting Seoul, why did you come now?" Chung Wan-shik, 68, asked his 95-year-old father Chung Dae-chun, who lost contact with his family as the war struck while he was on a business trip in South Korea.
Saturday's reunions also included two South Korean abductees and one South Korean prisoner of war in the North.
The two abductees _ former South Korean fishermen whose ship was seized by North Korea in waters off the west coast 22 years ago _ met their loved ones from the South.
"I never forget to think about my hometown and sister," Roh Song-ho, one of the fishermen, told his South Korean sister. He married in North Korea, and brought his wife and daughter to the reunion.
South Korea says the North is holding 560 of its soldiers from the war, in addition to 504 South Korean civilians _ mostly fishermen whose boats were seized since the war's end.
North Korea says the civilians voluntarily defected to the North and denies holding any prisoners of war.
The North agreed to resume the reunions last month as part of its moves to reach out to South Korea and the United States after months of tension over its nuclear and missile programs. The reunions also come amid growing pressure on Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear weapons programs and return to stalled disarmament talks.
North Korea boycotted the six-nation nuclear talks in April to protest world criticism of a rocket launch it carried out, but its leader Kim Jong Il has reportedly expressed interest in "bilateral and multilateral talks," indicating the North could rejoin the nuclear negotiations involving the U.S., China, Japan, South Korea and Russia.Labels: North Korea, South Korea
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Ex-Samsung chairman pays $91 million fine
SEOUL (AFP)
The former head of South Korea's largest business group Samsung has paid a fine of more than 90 million dollars in a single instalment, officials said Monday.
A court last month had sentenced Lee Kun-Hee to a suspended three-year prison term and a fine of 110 billion won (91.2 million dollars) for his role in a 1999 bond issue.
Lee decided not to appeal the ruling that he was guilty of breach of trust over the issuance of Samsung SDS bonds with warrants. The exercise was aimed at transferring management control over the group to his only son Lee Jae-Yong.
The court found that the bonds were issued at below market price and that the group subsidiary lost 22.7 billion won as a result. It suspended Lee's jail term for five years.
The Supreme Prosecutor's Office confirmed Lee paid the entire fine last Friday to one of its Seoul branch offices.
Forbes Asia in April listed Lee as Korea's richest man, with assets estimated at 3.9 billion dollars.
Lee, 67, led Samsung for almost 20 years and was widely credited with turning it into a global brand. He stepped down in April 2008 following an investigation by special prosecutors into claims by a former group lawyer of irregularities.
In a separate trial Lee was convicted of tax evasion, received a suspended prison sentence and was fined 182 billion won. That fine was paid in May last year.
AFP - Tuesday, September 22
Credits to Yahoo NewsLabels: Lee Kun-hee, news, Samsung, South Korea
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