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North and South Korean navies exchange fire: Report

brahmastra

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Yonhap news agency says that navies of the two Koreas have exchanged fire off the west coast.

Yonhap says that a South Korean warship shot at a North Korean navy ship that crossed the disputed western sea border on Tuesday morning.

Yonhap, citing an unidentified government source in South Korea, said the North’s ship shot back at the South Korean warship. It didn’t provide further details.

North and South Korean navies have fought deadly skirmishes along the western sea border in 1999 and 2002.

The Hindu : News / International : North and South Korean navies exchange fire: Report
 
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Korean naval ships 'clash at sea'

There has been a clash between ships from the rival navies of North and South Korea, according to the South Korean news agency Yonhap.
The agency says that a South Korean warship fired a shot at a North Korean vessel which crossed the demarcation line off their western coast.
The North Korean ship returned fire, but no injuries are reported so far.
The two navies have engaged in deadly exchanges twice along their western sea border in the past decade.

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BBC NEWS | Asia-Pacific | Korean naval ships 'clash at sea'
 
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IN the divided nations' first serious military clash in seven years, South Korea's navy claims to have attacked and heavily damaged a North Korean patrol boat this morning.

After a six-month period when the isolated Pyongyang regime has attempted to build a rapprochement with the US, South Korea's ally and protector, the clash could provoke another tightening of tensions on the peninsula.

Navy officials in Seoul, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Southern vessels fired warning shots at a Northern patrol boat that crossed the Northern Limit Line (NLL), their de-facto western maritime boundary, about 11.30am local time.

The patrol boat responded with live fire and, according to the Southern officials, their vessels attacked, inflicting “considerable damage”.

“It wasn't a close-range battle. We fired heavily on the North Korean vessel,” said one South Korean Navy official.



He said no South Korean sailors were hurt in the incident but there was no word on Northern casualties. As of this afternoon there was no official confirmation or comment from Pyongyang.

Another official said the navy command was analysing the incident to establish whether the NLL crossing was accidental or a North Korean provocation.

North Korea disputes the location of the NLL, which was drawn by the Americans after the Korean War armistice in 1953, and early this year, during the most recent episode of aggressive rhetoric, the regime said it would not recognise the line or any other demarcation or treaty with the South.

This morning's fight, which the Southern navy said was finished within a minute, is in the same general area as bloody naval clashes in 1999 and 2002 and where warning shots were fired at an encroaching Northern vessel in 2004.

In the June 2002 battle, four Southern sailors died and one went missing and a Northern vessel was destroyed.

In both previous clashes, the South Korean navy demonstrated significantly superior firepower and capabilities.

President Lee Myung-bak has offered Kim Jong-il a “grand bargain” of Southern aid if the regime returns to six-party talks and agrees to abandon its nuclear weapons.

However, Mr Lee, who has pursued a tougher line than his two predecessors, has dismissed as “unprincipled” a North-South summit before Mr Kim agrees to return to six-party talks.
 
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AFP: NKorea boat "in flames" after naval clash: Seoul

SEOUL — A North Korean patrol boat was set ablaze after exchanging fire with South Korea's navy on Tuesday, Seoul officials said, as tensions rose a week before a scheduled US presidential visit.

The two sides blamed each other for the clash, the first for seven years near the disputed Yellow Sea border off the west coast.

President Lee Myung-Bak called an emergency meeting of security ministers as his Prime Minister Chung Un-Chan accused the North of making a "direct attack" on a high-speed patrol craft.

"There was no damage on our side while a North Korean patrol boat engulfed in flame sailed back (across the border)," Chung told parliament.

He described the clash, which follows recent peace overtures from the North, as unplanned and urged people to stay calm.

Some analysts, however, said Pyongyang may be sending President Barack Obama a message, eight days before he arrives in South Korea as part of an Asian tour.

The Joint Chiefs of Staff said the South's boat sent several warning signals after the North's boat crossed the border, but the intruder held its course.

After the South's boat fired warning shots, "the North's side opened fire, directly aiming at our ship. Then our ship responded by firing back, forcing the North Korean boat to return to the north," the statement said.

"There were no casualties on our side. We are on the lookout for any further provocations by the North," it said.

"We fired heavily on the North Korean vessel," an unidentified navy official told Yonhap news agency, adding the initial assessment was that it suffered considerable damage.

"We express our strong protest to North Korea and urge it to prevent a recurrence of such incidents," said Brigadier-General Lee Ki-Sik of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

He said the two sides exchanged fire for two minutes from a distance of 3,200 metres (3,500 yards). The North fired about 50 rounds, 15 of which hit the South Korean boat.

The border known as the Northern Limit Line (NLL) has always been a potential flashpoint and was the scene of bloody naval clashes in 1999 and 2002. History of naval clashes between the two Koreas

The North's navy last month accused South Korea of sending warships across the line to stir tensions, and said the "reckless military provocations" could trigger clashes.

General Lee said the North breached the NLL 22 times this year. But this was the first time the South had to fire warning shots because the patrol boat kept intruding despite five warning signals.

North Korea's military, however, told its South Korean counterpart to apologise for a "grave armed provocation" and said Seoul's ships had opened fire while its craft was north of the border.

In a report on Pyongyang's official media, the North said its boat "lost no time to deal a prompt retaliatory blow at the provokers".

Kim Yong-Hyun, a professor at Dongguk University, said he thought it likely the incident was an intentional provocation from the North because its boat ignored warnings from the South.

"This might be an intentional clash aimed at heightening tension ahead of Obama's trip," Kim told YTN television.

"I believe North Korea is trying to show Obama the volatility of the peninsula. North Korea has demanded a peace pact be signed with the US to replace the truce agreement (which ended the 1950-53 war)."

The clash, which occurred at 11.28 am (0228 GMT) near Daechong island, came amid Pyongyang's peace feelers to Seoul and Washington after months of hostility marked by its missile test-launches and a nuclear test.

The North has invited US special envoy Stephen Bosworth to Pyongyang for talks on ending the standoff about its nuclear weapons programme. Washington was expected to decide soon to go ahead with the trip.

The NLL was drawn up unilaterally by United Nations forces at the end of the Korean War in 1953. The North has never recognised it and wants it drawn further to the south.
 
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(URGENT) N. Korea's military demands Seoul's apology for Tuesday's naval clash: KCNA
 
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Well, yes. They're technically at war.

I'm puzzled to hear that North Korea suffered the damage while South Korean vessels remained unscathed.

Is U.S still backing and privileging South Korea just like it did in Korean war? :what:
 
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Why they can not follow the event of The Berlin wall anniversary as they have the same language, religion and ethnic? (ref. post#01)
 
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