Manila Bulletin

North Korean soldier defects to South, warning shots fired

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SEOUL (AFP/Reuters) – A North Korean soldier defected to the South on Thursday across the heavily-guarded Demilitari­zed Zone that divides the peninsula, Seoul's defense ministry said, only a month after a comrade did the same under a hail of bullets from his own side.

The ''low-ranking'' soldier was spotted by South Korean soldiers using surveillan­ce equipment as he crossed the mid-western part of the land border in thick fog and made his way to a guard post, a ministry spokesman said.

No shots were fired at the time, he said, but South Korean troops later fired around 20 rounds from a K-3 machine gun to warn off Northern guards who approached the border apparently looking for the man.

The incident came a month after a rare and dramatic defection by a soldier at Panmunjom, the truce village where opposing forces confront each other across a concrete dividing line.

On that occasion the defector drove to the heavily-guarded border at speed and ran across under a hail of bullets from his own side. He was hit at least four times.

Footage showed the badly injured man being pulled to safety by two South Korean soldiers who crawled to reach him just south of the demarcatio­n line.

He has since been recovering in hospital in the South.

Away from Panmunjom, the rest of the 4-kilometre (2.5-mile) -wide DMZ bristles with barbed wire and is littered with minefields, making any crossing extremely hazardous.

Two North Korean civilians also defected this week after being found drifting in a rickety engineless boat off South's eastern coast, Yonhap news agency reported, citing the Unificatio­n Ministry, which handles relations with the North.

They were spotted by a South Korean surveillan­ce aircraft and picked up by a nearby navy vessel, it said.

The developmen­ts bring this year's total for the number of people defecting directly to the South to 15, a Joint Chiefs of Staff tally showed -- three times as many as in 2016.

Around 30,000 North Koreans have fled repression and poverty in their homeland to reach the South over the decades since the end of the 1950-53 Korean War, with 1,418 doing so last year according to Unificatio­n Ministry data.

The vast majority go first to China, with which the North shares a long border, and where they face the risk of being repatriate­d to an uncertain fate if caught. They travel on to the South later, often via another country.

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