World | North Korea Thawing Relations: South Korea Sending Aid to North 5,000 tons of rice, cement to be shipped By Drew Nelles Posted Sep 13, 2010 8:24 AM CDT Copied South Korea's Red Cross President Yoo Chong-ha delivers a speech to the nation during a press conference in Seoul, South Korea, Monday, Sept. 13, 2010. (AP Photo/ Lee Jin-man) South Korea will send $8.5 million in aid to flood-ravaged North Korea in a sign of warming relations, NPR reports. The 5,000-ton shipment of rice and cement represents the South’s first major aid shipment to its neighbor after an alleged torpedo attack from the North in March that killed 46 South Korean sailors. Last month’s catastrophic flooding—which has affected some 90,000 people—and the North’s ongoing economic troubles appear to be behind the thawing relations, which have also seen North Korea float the idea of more family reunions. "I'm optimistic that at some point in the not-too-distant future we can be back engaged," a US envoy said of restarting stalled negotiations on Pyongyang’s nuclear program. For more news on the North, including a possible transfer of power in the works, click here. Read These Next Why the Brightline of Florida is called the 'Death Train.' Harris suggests another run could happen. Kohler's new product isn't a toilet: It's a camera for it. The world of poker is up in arms over new tax rules on gambling. Report an error