North and South Korea have agreed to resume reunions for families separated by the Korean War in August - the first such meetings since 2015.
The reunions will be held from 20 to 26 August in the North's Mount Kumgang resort, according to a joint statement released after an inter-Korean Red Cross meeting.
Millions of people were separated during the 1950-53 conflict that sealed the division of the peninsula.
The resumption of the family reunions was one of the agreements reached between North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and the South's president Moon Jae-in at their landmark summit in April.
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"The reunion will be held from August 20 to 26 and 100 participants will be selected from each side," said a joint Seoul-Pyongyang statement released by the South's unification ministry.
South Korean officials will begin inspections of the Mount Kumgang resort - the venue of the reunions - from next week, it added.
Only about 57,000 people registered with the South Korean Red Cross to meet their separated relatives remain alive, most of them aged over 70.
For the lucky few chosen to take part, the experience is often hugely emotional, as they are given only three days to make up for decades of time apart, followed by another separation at the end - in all likelihood permanent.
The reunion programme began in earnest after a historic inter-Korean summit in 2000 and they were initially held annually, but strained cross-border relations have made them rare.
Pyongyang has a lengthy track record of manipulating the issue of divided families for political purposes, refusing proposals for regular reunions and cancelling scheduled events at the last minute.
North Korea had previously said it would not agree to family reunions unless Seoul returns several of its citizens, including a group of waitresses who defected from a restaurant in China.