Bangkok Post

Saved NK sailors sent home

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TOKYO: Japan yesterday handed over three North Korean crew members who were rescued from a capsized fishing boat to a North Korean vessel that will return them home, officials said.

The three men were rescued by Japan’s coastguard on Wednesday while floating on the small wooden vessel off the northern coast of the Noto Peninsula, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told reporters.

The men expressed their wish to return home while interviewe­d on a Japanese coastguard boat and were handed over yesterday to another North Korean fishing vessel at sea, said coastguard spokesman Satoru Nanjo.

The coastguard ise still searching for their missing fellow crew members.

The t hree told Japanese officials they came with 12 other crew members from North Korea to fish, and their boat capsized just as they were heading home, Mr Nanjo said.

The area, about 360km north of the peninsula, is in waters where Japan’s exclusive economic zone overlaps with those of neighbouri­ng countries. It’s a rich fishing ground where poachers from North Korea and China have been spotted.

Japan and North Korea have no diplomatic ties. The incident comes as Japan steps up pressure on the North over Pyongyang’s missile and nuclear threats.

Boats believed to be from North Korea often wash up on Japan’s northern coast during the winter because of the seasonal wind from the northwest. Three North Korean boats with 10 bodies inside washed up on the peninsula in 2015.

This year, 13 cases of wreckages were reported in three northern prefecture­s facing the Sea of Japan.

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