South Korean soldiers fired hundreds of shots at man swimming to North Korea
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- NEW: About 30 soldiers fired "several hundred shots," a military official says
- NEW: The man ignored repeated warnings to turn back, he says
- The man jumped into the Imjin River at the border with a float and began swimming
- Attempts to defect from South Korea to the North are rare
The shooting took place Monday afternoon at the heavily fortified border that separates the two Koreas.
The South Korean man
managed to get past a barbed wire fence by the bank of the Imjin River,
which flows through part of the Demilitarized Zone between the two
countries, and then jumped into the water with a Styrofoam float, Brig.
Gen. Cho Jong-sul said Tuesday.
"We kept warning him
verbally to come back to land," Cho said at a news conference. "The
river was only about 800 meters wide where he jumped in. It wouldn't
have taken long for him to swim across with the float. It was a very
tense situation."
When the man failed to heed the warnings, the entire unit of about 30 soldiers began firing at him.
"Several hundred shots were fired," Cho said.
Asked whether this was a
reasonable response, he said, "It is a regulation to shoot anyone who
does not respond to the command and tries to escape in the controlled
area."
Defections to North unusual
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The two Koreas are technically still at war
after the all-out conflict they fought between 1950 and 1953 ended in a
truce rather than a peace treaty. Their border is considered to be the
most heavily fortified in the world.
Authorities said the
man's surname was Nam but declined to disclose any other details about
him beyond his nationality. The case is still being investigated, Cho
said.
Several South Korean news outlets reported that Nam was in his 40s.
While tens of thousands
of people have managed to flee to South Korea from the authoritarian
regime in the North -- mostly through China -- defections in the other
direction are very rare.
Cho didn't say whether
there had been any similar cases previously. The South Korean news
agency Yonhap reported that this was the first shooting of this kind of
somebody apparently trying to defect to North Korea.
In 2009, the North's
state-run Korean Central News Agency trumpeted the defection of a South
Korean, Kang Tong-rim, who it said crossed the eastern part of the
border. But South Korean authorities said he was fleeing police who
wanted him for an assault incident.
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