Most S. Koreans with Families in N. Korea Have No Information on Their Fate: Poll | Be Korea-savvy

Most S. Koreans with Families in N. Korea Have No Information on Their Fate: Poll


Ryang Cha-ok (L), 82, of North Korea meets with her South Korean sisters at a hotel at North Korea's Kumgang Mountain resort on the east coast as part of inter-Korean family reunions on Aug. 24, 2018. The inter-Korean reunion of families separated by the 1950-53 Korean War was the first of its kind in nearly three years. (Pool photo) (Yonhap)

Ryang Cha-ok (L), 82, of North Korea meets with her South Korean sisters at a hotel at North Korea’s Kumgang Mountain resort on the east coast as part of inter-Korean family reunions on Aug. 24, 2018. The inter-Korean reunion of families separated by the 1950-53 Korean War was the first of its kind in nearly three years. (Pool photo) (Yonhap)

SEOUL, Dec. 9 (Korea Bizwire)Eight out of 10 families divided by the 1950-53 Korean War have yet to confirm the fate of their parents and siblings in North Korea, a government survey showed Thursday.

According to the unification ministry’s poll on 5,354 separated family members living in South Korea and abroad, 82 percent said they do not know whether their family members in the reclusive neighbor are still alive.

Among those who are aware of the fate and whereabouts of their dispersed family members, half of them obtained the information via organizers of private exchange programs or other individuals, the poll said.

Only a quarter of them heard news on their families living in the North through the government, it noted

When it comes to relevant government efforts, 65.8 percent said it is most urgent to push for measures to confirm the fate of their family members in North Korea and receive a notification via a government channel in the case of death.

Over 20 percent of the respondents also pointed out the government should push for regular family reunions and letter exchanges between family members divided due to the war, according to the poll.

The ministry in charge of handling inter-Korean relations said it will push for expanding the scope of the policy for separated families beyond the first generation to facilitate exchanges between their second- and third-descendants.

“Even today, about 10 people die a day without having met their divided family members. Considering the differences in life expectancy between the two Koreas, about five years are effectively (left) from now (for them),” a ministry official said on the background.

“(We) hope that North Korea will consider the (matter of) separated families as that of urgent attention.”

The respondents were chosen from a list of 47,004 South Koreans alive who have formally asked the government to find their families across the border. The survey marked the third of its kind following the previous ones in 2011 and 2016.

(Yonhap)

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