The Borneo Post

Both Koreas broke armistice in DMZ shooting — UNC

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SEOUL: An exchange of gunfire between North and South Korean forces in the Demilitari­zed Zone dividing the peninsula was a violation of the armistice agreement, the United Nations Command (UNC) said yesterday.

The two sides remain technicall­y at war, since fighting in the Korean War ended with an armistice in 1953 that was never replaced with a peace treaty.

North Korean gunfire hit a Southern guard post on May 3, prompting Seoul’s soldiers to return fire a few minutes later and broadcast warnings.

The UNC – which monitors compliance with the ceasefire – opened an investigat­ion into the shooting and concluded that “both sides committed Armistice Agreement violations”, it said in a statement.

The probe found the North’s Korean People’s Army fired four 14.5mm small-arms rounds, which were responded to by two volleys from South Korea.

But the investigat­ion was “unable to definitive­ly determine” whether the North’s gunshots were fired “intentiona­lly or by mistake”, the UNC said.

The North’s military did not offer a “formal response” when the UNC invited it to take part in the investigat­ion, it said, adding that the South’s forces provided “full cooperatio­n”.

Seoul’s defence ministry expressed regret over the announceme­nt of the findings and said its troops were following their response manual.

Despite its name, the Demilitari­zed Zone is one of the most fortified places on earth, replete with minefields and barbed-wire fences.

The last time the two sides exchanged fire on the border was in 2014. North Korean soldiers also shot at a defecting soldier in 2017, but the South did not fire back.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and the South’s President Moon Jae-in agreed to ease military tensions on their border at a summit in Pyongyang in September 2018, among other agreements.

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