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dan9999
03-26-2010, 06:15 PM
South Korean Sailors Reportedly Die as Ship Sinks Near North Korea
March 26, 2010
AP

A news report says a number of South Korean sailors died when their military ship sank off an island not far from North Korea, as the South Korean navy shot at unidentified ships near the maritime border.

SEOUL, South Korea -- A news report says a number of South Korean sailors died when their military ship sank off an island not far from North Korea.

South Korea's Yonhap news agency cited an unidentified naval official early Saturday as saying there were some deaths. The military says it cannot confirm the report but says 58 of the 104 crew members on board the ship that sank late Friday were safe.

The military scrambled naval vessels to the western waters near the disputed maritime border with rival North Korea late Friday after an explosion ripped a hole in the bottom of a military ship, officials and news reports said.

South Korea's Yonhap news agency reported an explosion in the rear of the 1,200-ton ship and said the military had not ruled out the possibility of an attack by North Korea. However, the military official said the exact cause was not immediately clear and said he could not confirm the Yonhap report.

A rescue mission was under way and the military moved to strengthen its vigilance near the maritime border, the site of three bloody naval clashes in the past between the warring Koreas. The divided peninsula remains in a state of war because the three-year Korean conflict ended in a truce, not a peace treaty, in 1953.

Earlier Friday, North Korea's military threatened "unpredictable strikes," including a nuclear attack, in anger over a report that South Korea and the U.S. were preparing for possible instability in the totalitarian country.

After the ship began sinking, President Lee Myung-bak convened an emergency meeting of security-related ministers, Yonhap said, citing presidential spokeswoman Kim Eun-hye. She said it wasn't clear yet whether North Korea was involved in the ship's demise.

Six naval ships and two coast guard vessels were rushed to the waters to save the crew, Yonhap said. Rescue helicopters and ambulances also sped to the scene, the military official said. By 12:30 a.m. Saturday, with the ship nearly submerged, 58 of the soldiers had been rescued, the official said. There were no immediate confirmation of any casualties.

Yonhap reported earlier that a South Korean ship fired shots toward an unidentified target in the direction of North Korea. The military official confirmed that shots were fired but said the object detected by radar may have been a flock of birds.

Baeknyeong Island, four hours' by boat from the port of Incheon, is the westernmost point of South Korea and is a key military post for South Korea because of its proximity to the North.

dan9999
03-27-2010, 02:07 PM
Search continues for South Korean sailors after sinking
March 27, 2010 6:08 a.m. EDT

(CNN) -- South Korean rescuers were searching for missing sailors Saturday after a navy ship sank in tense Yellow Sea waters off the coast of North Korea.

The 1,200-ton patrol ship Cheonan was on routine patrol when it sank Friday at 9:45 p.m. A cause has yet to be determined but the Yonhap News Agency quoted military officials as saying that an unidentified explosion punched a hole in the bottom of the ship.

The vessel was carrying 104 sailors, 58 of whom have been rescued. Divers continued the search for 46 missing sailors in unseasonably cold temperatures and treacherous waters.

A photograph released to media showed a section of the ship's hull still above water, raising hopes that the sailors could be alive.

Tensions simmered after the Cheonan went down off Baengnyeong, a Seoul-administered island in a flashpoint maritime border area between the Koreas.

South Korean President Lee Myung-bak has ordered a "quick and thorough" investigation into what caused the ship to sink, keeping in mind "all possibilities," his office said, according to Yonhap.

He convened a meeting of national security-related ministers immediately after the incident occurred, and a second one on Saturday morning.

Given Baengyeong island's proximity to North Korea, North Korean involvement was feared, but South Korean officials have been playing down that scenario. And a U.S. State Department spokesman said Friday that there was no evidence North Korea was behind the incident.

"Let's not jump to conclusions here," said the spokesman, Philip J. Crowley. "I'm not aware of any evidence to that effect, but I think the authoritative source here would be the South Korean government."

Baengnyeong residents had reported hearing gunfire at sea shortly after the Cheonan sank. South Korean officials later confirmed that on of their ships had fired on a radar contact that turned out to be a flock of birds.

Baengnyeong lies on the Northern Limit Line (NLL), the maritime border between the two states which North Korea disputes and which covers rich crab fishing grounds.

The NLL was the scene of fatal naval skirmishes in 1999 and 2002. The two Koreas also exchanged naval gunfire in 2004 and 2009.

In recent months, North Korea has been firing coastal artillery into the waters near the island, and shells had been fired earlier Friday, according to news reports.

Journalist Andrew Salmon contributed to this report.