The Star Malaysia

North Korean soldier defects across border to South

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SEOUL: A North Korean soldier defected to South Korea across their heavily fortified land border, which the two sides have begun to demilitari­se as relations between the Cold War-era foes warm, the South’s military said.

The rare defection came as the two Koreas push ahead with a process of reconcilia­tion in an effort to ease tensions, despite talks between Pyongyang and Washington on the North’s nuclear weapons programme stalling.

The incident did not trigger any gunfire, unlike last year when a North Korean soldier ran across under a hail of bullets from his own side.

“A North Korean soldier was detected crossing the military demarcatio­n line” by South Korean troops using surveillan­ce equipment, the military Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said in a statement.

“Related agencies plan to investigat­e him regarding the details of how he came to the South,” it said.

The JCS gave no further details, such as the exact location of the defection, the soldier’s name, rank or unit or whether he was carrying a weapon.

“The soldier is safely in our custody”, the JCS said.

The last defection involving North Koreans occurred in May when two civilians aboard a small boat fled to the South across the Yellow Sea.

In November last year, a North Korean soldier drove to the heavily guarded border at speed and ran across under fire from his own comrades.

He was hit multiple times in the dramatic defection at Panmunjom truce village, a major tourist attraction and the only place on the frontier where forces from the two sides come face-to-face.

In 2012, a North Korean soldier walked unchecked through rows of electrifie­d fencing and surveillan­ce cameras, prompting Seoul to sack three field commanders for a security lapse.

More than 30,000 North Korean civilians have fled their homeland since the peninsula was divided at the end of the 1950-53 Korean War.

Most flee across the porous frontier with neighbouri­ng China and it is very rare for them to cross the closely guarded inter-Korean border, which is fortified with minefields and barbed wire.

In recent months, however, the two sides have begun to remove landmines and destroy military bunkers at parts of the border as part of efforts to improve longstrain­ed relations.

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