About 300 family members from North and South Korea meet long-lost relatives after being separated by the Korean War. The reunions are expected to continue through Friday.
North and South Korean family members reunited on Wednesday with their long-lost relatives during a brief three-day reunion.
Some 100 aging South Koreans drove across a tensely guarded armed border to be reunited with relatives at the Mount Kumgang resort.
Park Sang-hwa cries as he met with his daughter who was merely a year old when they were separated during the Korean War.
[Park Sang-hwa, South Korean]:
"I cannot believe that you're alive. I'm a bad father.”
[Jin Ok, North Korean]:
"I also thought I had no father.”
The reunions started last week and will continue until Friday.
The resumption of the reunions comes amid a flurry of conciliatory moves by both sides. South Korea has been looking for ways to restart talks with the North on ending its nuclear arms program.