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South Korea repatriates six North Koreans rescued at sea across eastern maritime border

By IANS | Updated: July 9, 2025 13:04 IST

Seoul, July 9 South Korea on Wednesday repatriated six North Koreans via the maritime border in the East ...

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Seoul, July 9 South Korea on Wednesday repatriated six North Koreans via the maritime border in the East Sea, months after they had drifted into southern waters and were rescued.

A wooden boat carrying them, all fishermen, crossed the Northern Limit Line (NLL), the de facto maritime border, at around 8:56 am, according to an official at South Korea's unification ministry.

The boat headed on its own toward two North Korea ships, including a patrol vessel, waiting on the other side of the NLL, and the three ships subsequently moved northward together, the official said.

In May, South Korea rescued four North Koreans aboard a ship that had drifted into the South Korean side of the East Sea, following a similar case in March in which two North Koreans were rescued in the Yellow Sea. All of them expressed a wish to go back to the North.

The repatriated boat is one of the vessels the North Koreans were rescued in. It was repaired for the fishermen's repatriation, while the other was deemed unusable due to damage.

"The repatriation would have been carried out much more smoothly and promptly if the two Koreas had been in close contact and communication," the ministry official said.

Ministry spokesperson Koo

The official said the government had confirmed the North Koreans' wish to return home multiple times before being sent back.

The repatriation came even though North Korea had remained unresponsive to Seoul's repeated calls, made through the US-led UN Command (UNC), to arrange the North Koreans' return, with inter-Korean communication channels still severed amid strained ties, Yonhap news agency reported.

Through the UNC channel, Seoul notified Pyongyang of the repatriation location and time, but the North Korean ships appeared for the transfer without prior notice or response, the ministry official said.

Seoul chose the sea route for the repatriation, rather than the land route via the inter-Korean truce village of Panmunjom, because an on-land repatriation could potentially trigger tension amid Pyongyang's lack of response on the matter, according to the official.

The repatriation came as President Lee Jae Myung seeks to mend strained relations with North Korea in a bid to ease military tensions and establish peace.

Since taking office last month, Lee ordered a halt to the military's loudspeaker broadcasts against North Korea and urged civic groups to suspend their anti-Pyongyang campaigns to send propaganda leaflets across the border to North Korea.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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