Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

South Korea in uphill battle to recover war remains

- HYUNG-JIN KIM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ANYANG, South Korea — On the first day of each month, Kwak Geum-ja makes a pilgrimage to a Korean War memorial in her neighborho­od to pray for her father, a South Korean soldier who died in battle when she was just a baby.

His remains have yet to be recovered, and the aging Kwak is eager for them to be found and interred at the national cemetery.

“I’m over 70 now. I won’t have any regrets in my life if I recover my father’s remains before I die,” a teary- eyed Kwak said during an interview in the city of Anyang, just south of the capital, Seoul. “I just want to see and confirm them with my eyes. Nothing more.”

Kwak is among the tens of thousands of South Koreans hoping the remains of their loved ones — soldiers who perished during the 1950-53 Korean War — will be found.

There’s still a long way to go.

Since recovery efforts modeled after a similar U.S. mission began in earnest more than 20 years ago, authoritie­s have unearthed thousands of sets of remains believed to be deceased South Korean soldiers, but they have only been able to identify 166 of them. The number of unrecovere­d South Korean soldiers stands at about 120,000.

South Korea has so far collected DNA samples from blood relatives of only about 47,000 slain soldiers to compare with DNA extracted from exhumed bones.

The conflict, which pitted South Korea and U.S.-led U.N. forces against North Korea and China, killed 1 million to 2 million people, including 160,000 South Korean soldiers.

Finding their remains is an urgent, emotional task because most of the bereaved relatives are either elderly or have already passed away.

The recovery work is complicate­d by the fact that many South Korean soldiers were sent to the front without military identifica­tion during the war’s opening phase as the South rushed to blunt the surprise North Korean invasion. Authoritie­s also didn’t keep most soldiers’ dental records, chest X-rays and other forms of ID. Once the conflict ended, rapid post-war reconstruc­tion and land redevelopm­ent projects followed, making it difficult to locate some former battlefiel­ds and burial sites.

“It would be more meaningful for bereaved families to get back their loved ones’ remains when they are still alive. That’s our fundamenta­l yet most difficult mission,” said Im Na Hyok, director of the central identifica­tion laboratory at a Defense Ministry-run agency that’s responsibl­e for recovering and identifyin­g troops killed in action.

During a recent visit by Associated Press journalist­s to her laboratory, located in Seoul’s national cemetery, she discussed some of the remains authoritie­s have dug up in recent years from a former battlefiel­d inside the Demilitari­zed Zone, a strip of heavily fortified land that forms the de facto border between the two Koreas. It was South Korea’s first such excavation project in the DMZ since the war’s end.

Describing a yellowish, near-complete skeleton laid on a lab table, Im said the remains were likely a U.N. soldier from Europe, not Korean. She noted the higher-bridged nasal bone and teeth with amalgam fillings, a dental treatment that didn’t exist in both Koreas and China at the time of the war. A bullet-resistant vest, boots and other items collected with the skeleton were all found to be U.N.-provided gear, she said.

Another, less- complete skeleton is suspected to be a South Korean soldier. Im said the soldier likely died around age 25, citing her team’s examinatio­n of the wisdom teeth, tooth wear and the condition of other bones.

Im said she hopes to expand her office’s missions into North Korea, where Seoul believes about 30,000 unrecovere­d South Korean war dead are buried.

North Korea has never allowed South Korea to excavate on its territory. It also refuses to receive the remains of its soldiers South Korea has found.

But in a sign it prioritize­s relations with Washington, North Korea still conducted 33 joint recovery operations with the U.S. from 1996-2005, collecting 229 sets of American remains on its territory. In 2018, it returned 55 boxes containing the remains of presumed U.S. service members missing from the war as a goodwill gesture, as the two countries were engaged in now-stalled diplomacy on the North’s nuclear program.

The Korean Peninsula remains at a technical state of war, because an armistice that ended the conflict in 1953 has yet to be replaced with a peace treaty. More than 7,500 Americans remain unaccounte­d for from the Korean War.

Kwak’s father, Pfc. Kwak Jeong-kyu, died at age 26 at the South Korean border town of Cheolwon on Jan. 1, 1951. She said she submitted her blood samples more than 10 years ago. Each year she receives a letter from the government saying her father’s remains have yet to be found.

She has no memory of her dad, since she was only a year old when he was conscripte­d into the army. As a child, Kwak said she hated attending village parties involving families or seeing her friends’ fathers show up at school.

Shortly before her mother died of a heart problem in 1984, the war widow sank into delirium and asked if her husband had returned.

“When she was dying, those were the only words she uttered … I think my mom said this because she had deep longings for him too,” Kwak said.

Choi Choong- sik, the 68-year-old son of a late South Korean marine, said it was only around 1980 that his family learned there was a grave with his father’s name on it at the national cemetery, although they were informed of his death soon after he was killed in the war’s closing weeks.

Choi regularly pays his respects at the grave. But he still submitted DNA samples to the search commission, in case his father’s remains are still out there. He feels there’s a possibilit­y someone else’s ashes might have been buried in the cemetery during the post-war chaos.

“I sometimes wonder if the remains at the grave are truly my father’s,” Choi said. “Wouldn’t it be wonderful if my father’s real remains are recovered when I’m still alive?”

 ?? (File photo/AP/Pool/Jung Yeon-je) ?? Members of South Korea’s Defense Ministry recovery team work Oct. 25, 2018, recovering the remains of soldiers killed in the Korean War in the Demilitari­zed Zone dividing the two Koreas in Cheorwon, South Korea.
(File photo/AP/Pool/Jung Yeon-je) Members of South Korea’s Defense Ministry recovery team work Oct. 25, 2018, recovering the remains of soldiers killed in the Korean War in the Demilitari­zed Zone dividing the two Koreas in Cheorwon, South Korea.
 ?? (AP/Ahn Young-joon) ?? Lee Kyu-chang, a member of the central identifica­tion laboratory at the Ministry of National Defense Agency for Killed in Action Recovery & Identifica­tion, watches July 26 a screen showing dental X-rays of an unidentifi­ed soldier killed during the Korean War at the National Cemetery in Seoul.
(AP/Ahn Young-joon) Lee Kyu-chang, a member of the central identifica­tion laboratory at the Ministry of National Defense Agency for Killed in Action Recovery & Identifica­tion, watches July 26 a screen showing dental X-rays of an unidentifi­ed soldier killed during the Korean War at the National Cemetery in Seoul.
 ?? (AP/Ahn Young-joon) ?? Im speaks July 26 about items of unidentifi­ed soldiers killed during the Korean War at the National Cemetery in Seoul.
(AP/Ahn Young-joon) Im speaks July 26 about items of unidentifi­ed soldiers killed during the Korean War at the National Cemetery in Seoul.
 ?? (AP/Ahn Young-joon) ?? Choi Choong-sik, son of a fallen Korean War soldier Choi Youngil, speaks July 30 during an interview in Anyang, South Korea.
(AP/Ahn Young-joon) Choi Choong-sik, son of a fallen Korean War soldier Choi Youngil, speaks July 30 during an interview in Anyang, South Korea.
 ?? (AP/Ahn Young-joon) ?? Kwak Geum-ja, daughter of a fallen Korean War soldier Kwak Jeong-kyu, wipes her tears July 30 during an interview in Anyang, South Korea.
(AP/Ahn Young-joon) Kwak Geum-ja, daughter of a fallen Korean War soldier Kwak Jeong-kyu, wipes her tears July 30 during an interview in Anyang, South Korea.
 ?? (AP/Ahn Young-joon) ?? Im Na Hyok, director of the central identifica­tion laboratory at the Ministry of National Defense Agency for Killed in Action Recovery & Identifica­tion, speaks July 26 about remains of unidentifi­ed soldiers killed during the Korean War at the National Cemetery in Seoul, South Korea.
(AP/Ahn Young-joon) Im Na Hyok, director of the central identifica­tion laboratory at the Ministry of National Defense Agency for Killed in Action Recovery & Identifica­tion, speaks July 26 about remains of unidentifi­ed soldiers killed during the Korean War at the National Cemetery in Seoul, South Korea.

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