N. Korea warns Seoul’s navy over search for dead official


North Korea has warned the South to not encroach into its territorial waters in the latter's search for a fisheries official that was shot dead by Northern soldiers on Tuesday. – EPA pic, September 27, 2020.

NORTH Korea today warned the South Korean navy to stop crossing into its territorial waters as ships search for the body of a Seoul official shot dead at sea by Pyongyang’s soldiers.

State media said the North will begin its own search for the body and warned that the South’s naval operations threatened to raise tensions.

The fisheries official was shot dead by North Korean soldiers on Tuesday – the first killing of a South Korean civilian by Pyongyang’s forces in a decade – prompting a rare public apology from leader Kim Jong-un.

Seoul’s military has accused the North Korean soldiers of pouring oil over the man’s body and burning it after shooting him.

The death was an “awful case which should not have happened”, the North’s official KCNA news agency said today, adding that Pyongyang is organising a search operation in its waters to help locate the body.

It said the country is considering “procedures and ways of handing over any tide-brought corpse to the south side… in case we find it during the operation”.

But it warned that South Korean vessels near the site of the incident had crossed into North Korean waters.

“We can never overlook any intrusion into our territorial waters and we seriously warn the south side against it,” KCNA said.

“It arouses our due vigilance as it may lead to another awful incident.”

South Korea yesterday demanded the North carry out a further probe into the shooting and said it will request a joint investigation if necessary.

Apologies from North Korea are unusual and the message from Kim came with inter-Korean ties in a deep freeze and nuclear negotiations between Pyongyang and Washington deadlocked.

There have been no North Korean media reports on the contents of the letter from Kim. – AFP, September 27, 2020.


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