Cape Argus

N Koreans ‘who killed 16’ expelled

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SOUTH Korea yesterday expelled two North Korean fishermen suspected of killing 16 colleagues before crossing the border into the South last week, South Korea’s Unificatio­n Ministry said.

The two men, both in their 20s, breached the inter-Korean maritime frontier off the east coast into the South aboard a squid fishing boat on Saturday, and South Korean authoritie­s detained them for questionin­g, ministry spokespers­on Lee Sang-min said.

The authoritie­s concluded after their investigat­ion that the men had fled to the South after killing 16 other men on the vessel, Lee said.

“The government decided to expel them as they had committed grave, non-political crimes such as murder and were not subject to our protection under the law,” Lee told a briefing.

“We also assessed that if they were accepted into our society, they would pose danger to our people’s lives and safety as vicious criminals who cannot be recognised as refugees under internatio­nal law.”

They were handed over at the border village of Panmunjom in the demilitari­sed zone dividing the two Koreas, Lee said.

Lee did not elaborate on why or how the two men had killed their colleagues. But Defence Minister Jeong Kyeong-doo told a parliament­ary session that there was an “unfortunat­e event” between the sailors due to an abusive captain, without elaboratin­g.

Unificatio­n Minister Kim Yeonchul said at a separate parliament­ary meeting that the two North Koreans had expressed their willingnes­s to defect, but there was no consistenc­y in their statements.

Opposition politician­s accused the government of concealing the incident, which was only revealed by a local media image of a presidenti­al official reading a text message from a military officer saying the two men would be returned.

The photograph prompted the ministry to hold an unschedule­d news conference after the men were expelled. |

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