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South Korea Naval Vessel Sunk; Cause Remains Unclear

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SEOUL, South Korea – Word that a South Korean naval ship sank in the tense waters around the disputed maritime border with communist North Korea set off panic: The president convened an emergency meeting and the military dispatched a fleet of ships.

Five hours later, 58 sailors had been pulled to safety but some 40 others were missing, reports said. There was no indication early Saturday that North Korea was to blame for the ship's demise, but troops kept a vigilant watch.

Seoul's panic attack — hours after North Korea's military threatened "unpredictable strikes" against the U.S. and South Korea — highlighted the fragility of peace on the divided Korean peninsula.

The two Koreas remain locked in a state of war because their three-year conflict ended in a truce, not a peace treaty, in 1953.

Since then, the two Koreas have fought three bloody skirmishes in the Yellow Sea waters. And in January, North Korea fired about 30 artillery rounds not far from Baeknyeong; the South Korean military fired 100 warning shots in response.

The 1,200-ton "Cheonan" was on a routine patrolling mission near South Korea's Baeknyeong Island on Friday night with 104 crew members on board when the ship began taking on water, Rear Adm. Lee Ki-sik of the Joint Chiefs of Staff told reporters.

Unidentified military officials told South Korea's Yonhap news agency that an explosion tore a hole into the rear hull, shutting off the engine, wiping out the power and quickly taking the ship down. A number of crew members jumped into the water, Yonhap said.

Six naval ships and two coast guard vessels, as well as helicopters and ambulances, rushed to save the crew, Yonhap and military officials said. Troops scanned the skies for an attack, at one point firing shots at what officials later speculated was a flock of birds.

President Lee Myung-bak, meanwhile, convened a late-night emergency meeting with his defense minister and other top military officials. After three hours, and no conclusion about what caused the ship to sink, they agreed to meet again Saturday, presidential spokesman Lee Dong-kwan said.

President Lee ordered the military to focus on the rescue operation, he said.

Nearby Baeknyeong Island, four hours by boat from the South Korean port of Incheon but just 10 miles (20 kilometers) from North Korea, was turned into a triage center, with islanders helping to treat injured crew members, according to cable network YTN.

A naval official told Yonhap there were deaths among the sailors, and YTN said some 40 crew members were missing. However, military officials told the AP they could not confirm deaths, and said 58 sailors had been rescued, with two airlifted for emergency medical treatment.

The waters around Baeknyeong island are rocky, and some senior government officials speculated that the sinking may have been an accident, not an attack, South Korean media said.

"It's looking more and more like it was just an accident that happens on a ship," Carl Baker, an expert on Korean military relations at the Pacific Forum CSIS think tank in Honolulu, said by telephone.

He said Pyongyang was unlikely to attack the far more powerful South Korean military.

"The South Koreans are so much more capable these days than the North that it would be difficult for the miscalculation to happen because I think the North understands its lack of ability," he said.

SKorean naval ship sinks near NKorea; 40 missing - Yahoo! News
 
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Seems like the vessel is pushing quite close to the NK border when the incident happened.
 
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apparently the blast was enough to tear the ship in two
 
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Korean War mine 'sunk' South Korean navy ship

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South Korean Navy's ship salvage unit members return to South Korean Navy's Landing Ship Tank transport vessel Seonginbong near South Korea's Baengnyeong Island Photo: AP​

A mine dating back to the 1950-53 Korean War might have been responsible for the sinking of a South Korean naval patrol ship last weekend, according to the country's defence minister.

His explanation came as hopes of finding 46 missing South Korean alive faded further after navy divers finally reached the upturned hull of the sunken ship but reported no signs of life within.

The 1,200-tonne corvett Cheonan sank on Friday night in the Yellow Sea along a disputed sea border with North Korea, sparking fears that Pyongyang had attacked the ship and temporarily sending shares lower in New York.
However, Kim Tae-Young, the defence minister, told a South Korean parliamentary committee that initial reports of a North Korean torpedo attack appeared unfounded, citing accounts from rescued sailors who had been operating the ship's radar at the time of the explosion.

"It is possible that a North Korean sea mine could have drifted into our area," he said, pointing out that North Korea had deployed some 3,000 Soviet mines in the Yellow Sea and the Sea of Japan during the war.

"Though many mines were removed, it must have been impossible to retrieve them all," he added.

One mine was found in 1959 and another in 1984, the minister said, although an extensive South Korean search in 2008 did not trace any, however it was impossible to rule out that a mine could have come adrift from its mooring.

High seas, poor weather and strong currents delayed efforts over the weekend to dive on the separate sections of the 290 foot ship, with some families of the missing raising hopes that men might have survived in air-pockets in the hull.

Lee Myung-Bak, South Korea's president, has called four emergency security meetings since the sinking but cautioned against jumping to conclusions about the cause.

"Do not give up hope that there could be survivors," he told searchers on Monday in a statement. "Look into the causes of the incident thoroughly and leave no single piece of doubt behind."

However divers reported no signs of life from the site of the sinking in near-freezing waters off Baengnyeong island near the disputed sea border.

"Our navy divers knocked on the stern with hammers in the afternoon, but so far there is no response from the inside," said a defence ministry spokesman.


Korean War mine 'sunk' South Korean navy ship - Telegraph

 
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South Korea continues search for ship survivors

Mon Mar 29 2010 09:34:35



South Korea is continuing to search for survivors after an "unexplained" explosion sank one of its warships.

The country's defence ministry has confirmed that the rescue team has succeeded in placing a buoy on the surface of the water, where part of the sunken Navy vessel is expected to be and which might still be carrying missing crew members.

Fifty-eight of the 104 on board have reportedly been rescued and navy officials said that several people have died.

MBC TV said it could take up to 20 days to bring the 1,200-tonne ship to the surface. It sank in waters 15-20 metres deep.

The site where the ship sank was the scene of two deadly naval fights between the rival Koreas in the past decade. North Korea has made no mention of the ship-sinking incident in its official media.

Navies from the rival Koreas exchanged gunfire for the first time in seven years in the Yellow Sea waters last November, damaging vessels on both sides.

South Korea continues search for ship survivors
 
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