The Asian Age

Amid Thaad row, South Korea returns Chinese soldiers’ bodies

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Seoul, March 22: Seoul on Wednesday repatriate­d the remains of 28 Chinese soldiers killed in the Korean War, despite a heated row between the two countries over a US missile defence system.

A row of goosestepp­ing Chinese honour guards received lacquered wooden boxes, each containing one set of remains, from their counterpar­ts during a ceremony at Incheon airport.

Beijing deployed millions of soldiers in the 1950-53 conflict, saving the fledging North from defeat by US-led UN forces and South Korea.

More than 180,000 Chinese soldiers are estimated to have died in the war.

“(We) appreciate the friendship and good will that South Korean people and media have shown regarding the repatriati­on of Chinese soldiers’ remains,” Sun Shaocheng, China’s vice minister of civil affairs, was quoted as saying by Yonhap.

A total of 569 sets of Chinese remains had been repatriate­d since the two countries reached an agreement on the issue three years ago, he noted.

The latest transfer came even as Seoul and Beijing are at odds over the deployment of the US Terminal High Altitude Area Defense battery to South Korea, which China sees as compromisi­ng its own capabiliti­es. Beijing has imposed a series of measures seen as economic retaliatio­n, including closures of South Korean-owned stores and a ban on tour groups going to its neighbour. Seoul and Washington say the system is for defence against the North’s threats.

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