SEOUL - The first reunion of families separated by the Korean War in more than three years began on Thursday afternoon in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK)'s Mount Kumgang resort.
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The 82 elderly South Koreans, four-fifths of them over 80, reunited with 178 of their long-lost relatives from the DPRK for the first time in six decades. The mass gathering, the first event for the three-day reunion, began at 3 pm local time as scheduled, according to Seoul's Unification Ministry.
At 8:20 am, the frail South Koreans, including two in ambulances and 19 in wheelchairs due to health problems, left a resort hotel in the country's east coastal city of Sokcho, where they received medical check-up and training on the dos and don'ts during their stay in the DPRK the previous day.
The South Korean participants crossed the inter-Korean border by bus at 11:04 am and arrived at the reunion venue at about 1 pm, according to a pool report published by the ministry.
A convoy of 10 coaches, carrying the South Korean elderly accompanied by 58 family members for physical support, drove some 80 kms along the snow-covered roadside, trailed by three ambulances, five passenger cars as escorts and one truck.
South Korean standers-by waved to the old men and women heading to the scenic Mount Kumgang resort where they will meet their DPRK relatives separated for six decades by the three-year Korean War that ended in armistice in 1953.
After the first group meeting that lasts for two hours through 5 p.m., families from the two Koreas will participate in the welcoming dinner hosted by the DPRK for two hours from 7 pm.
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