Business World

NK troops ‘killed’ missing S. Korean

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SEOUL — A South Korean fisheries official who went missing this week was questioned in North Korean (NK) waters before being shot dead by troops who then doused his body in oil and set it on fire, South Korea’s military said on Thursday.

South Korea’s military said evidence suggested the man was attempting to defect to the North when he was reported missing from a fisheries boat on Monday about 10 kms (6 miles) south of the Northern Limit Line (NLL), a disputed demarcatio­n of military control that acts as the de facto maritime boundary between the two Koreas.

The exact reason the 47-yearold official was shot is not known but North Korean troops may have been acting under anticorona­virus orders, South Korea’s military said.

Citing intelligen­ce sources, the military said the unidentifi­ed man appeared to have been questioned at sea north of the

NLL before he was executed on an “order from a superior authority.” Troops in gas masks then doused the body in oil and set it on fire.

The military said it sent a message on Wednesday to the North through the land border demanding

explanatio­ns, but has not received any response yet.

“Our military strongly condemns such an atrocity, and strongly demands North Korea provide explanatio­ns and punish those who are responsibl­e,” General Ahn Young-ho, who is in charge of operations at the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told a briefing.

The U.S. military commander in South Korea said this month that North Korean troops had been given “shoot-to-kill orders” to prevent the coronaviru­s entering the country.

In July, a man who had defected to South Korea three years ago triggered a coronaviru­s scare when he crossed back over the heavily monitored border into North Korea, which says it has had no cases of the disease.

His arrival prompted North Korean officials to lock down a border city and quarantine thousands of people over fears he may have had the coronaviru­s, though the World Health Organizati­on ( WHO) later said his test results were inconclusi­ve.

Last week, South Korean police arrested a defector who they said had tried to return to North Korea by breaking into a military training site in South Korea’s border town of Cheorwon. —

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? A SOUTH KOREAN military check point, front, and a North Korean military check point, rear, stand at the Demilitari­zed Zone in Paju, South Korea, on Wednesday, June 17.
BLOOMBERG A SOUTH KOREAN military check point, front, and a North Korean military check point, rear, stand at the Demilitari­zed Zone in Paju, South Korea, on Wednesday, June 17.

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