South Korea’s navy fired warning shots to chase away a North Korean fishing boat that crossed their disputed sea border early yesterday, the South Korean Defense Ministry said, in the latest flareup of tension on the divided peninsula just days before the G20 summit in Seoul.
The North Korean boat intruded on South Korean territory for about two hours before returning to North Korean waters early yesterday, the ministry said. The fertile maritime border, the scene of three deadly skirmishes between the Koreas, is a key flashpoint because the North does not recognize the line drawn by the UN at the close of the 1950-to-1953 Korean War.
The warning shots come just days after North Korea shot two rounds at a South Korean guard post in the Demilitarized Zone, prompting return fire from South Korean troops, according to Seoul military officials.
South Korea is bracing for any possible North Korean moves to sabotage next week’s G20 summit of world leaders. North Korea has a record of provocations when world attention is focused on the South.
In 1987, a year before the Seoul Olympics, North Korean agents planted a bomb on a South Korean plane, killing all 115 people on board. In 2002, when South Korea jointly hosted soccer’s World Cup along with Japan, a North Korean naval boat sank a South Korean patrol vessel near the sea border.
South Korean President Lee Myung-bak said yesterday that he does not believe Pyongyang would strike South Korea, but that Seoul was ready for anything.
“The South Korean government is making thorough preparations against [any possible attacks] by North Korea and worldwide terrorist organizations,” Lee told reporters during a televised news conference.
His comments came a day after militants in southern Yemen blew up an oil pipeline operated by a state-owned South Korean company, Korea National Oil, according to company officials. It was not clear whether al-Qaeda’s local offshoot was behind the attack, a Yemeni official said.
Tensions on the peninsula have been high since the mysterious sinking of a South Korean warship killed 46 sailors in March.
An international investigation concluded that a North Korean submarine fired a torpedo that sank the 1,200-tonne Cheonan near the tense Korean sea border. North Korea flatly denied involvement and warned that any punishment would mean war.
On Tuesday, North Korea issued a lengthy point-by-point denial.
The 7,000-word statement by North Korea’s powerful National Defense Commission accused the South Korean-led investigation of fabricating data. The US also was part of the investigation.
North Korea disputed the probe’s conclusion that an aluminum torpedo sank the warship, saying all of its torpedoes are made of steel alloy. The statement said the North is willing to hand over parts of one of its torpedoes to South Korea for verification.
In Seoul, the Joint Chiefs of Staff dismissed North Korea’s latest -denials as “nothing new.”
Meanwhile, the US-led UN Command yesterday returned the bodies of two North Korean soldiers that were found in the river running through the heavily fortified inter-Korean border.
The village is jointly overseen by the UN Command and North Korea, an arrangement established in 1953 to supervise the ceasefire that ended the three-year war.
CONFRONTATION: The water cannon attack was the second this month on the Philippine supply boat ‘Unaizah May 4,’ after an incident on March 5 The China Coast Guard yesterday morning blocked a Philippine supply vessel and damaged it with water cannons near a reef off the Southeast Asian country, the Philippines said. The Philippine military released video of what it said was a nearly hour-long attack off the Second Thomas Shoal (Renai Shoal, 仁愛暗沙) in the contested South China Sea, where Chinese ships have unleashed water cannons and collided with Philippine vessels in similar standoffs in the past few months. The China Coast Guard and other vessels “once again harassed, blocked, deployed water cannons, and executed dangerous maneuvers” against a routine rotation and resupply mission to
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Thousands of devotees, some in a state of trance, gathered at a Buddhist temple on the outskirts of Bangkok renowned for sacred tattoos known as Sak Yant, paying their respects to a revered monk who mastered the practice and seeking purification. The gathering at Wat Bang Phra Buddhist temple is part of a Thai Wai Khru ritual in which devotees pay homage to Luang Phor Pern, the temple’s formal abbot, who died in 2002. He had a reputation for refining and popularizing the temple’s Sak Yant tattoo style. The idea that tattoos confer magical powers has existed in many parts of Asia