Elderly Koreans distraught as family reunion hopes crushed
Cancellation of gathering at Mount Kumgang devastates families

The cancellation of a reunion for families separated by the Korean War has dealt a devastating blow to elderly Koreans denied a longed-for, and probably final, meeting with surviving relatives.
After a painstaking selection process, 96 South Koreans had been set to travel to the North’s Mount Kumgang resort this week for a face-to-face gathering with family members they haven’t seen for 60 years.
It would have been the first mass reunion for three years, but with just days to go, Pyongyang postponed the event, blaming “hostility” from South Korea.
The news shattered the hopes of the chosen participants, whose average age was 83 and many of whom were already in poor health.
In an interview with AFP before the postponement was announced, Lee Seon-jong, 81, had said he was so excited about the prospect of meeting his two sisters that he could barely sleep.
“You can’t imagine how much I’ve missed them,” said Lee who suffered a stroke several years ago and had a heart operation that left him paralysed on one side.