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S.Korea releases final report on fatal warship sinking

by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Sept 13, 2010
South Korea Monday released a full report into the deadly sinking of a warship blamed on North Korea, saying it was acting to quell "groundless" suspicions about who was to blame for the tragedy.

The defence ministry report, numbering around 300 pages, reaffirms conclusions reached in May by international investigators that a torpedo attack by a North Korean submarine sank the corvette and killed 46 sailors.

The South announced reprisals after the initial report was published, including a partial trade cut-off, triggering an angry response from the North, which continues to deny responsibility.

Many South Koreans are also sceptical. A survey by Seoul National University's Institute for Peace and Unification Studies showed that only three in 10 trust the findings of the international inquiry.

The 1,200-ton warship was split into two on March 26 near the tense inter-Korea sea border off the west coast, in one of the divided peninsula's deadliest incidents in decades.

Investigators from the United States, Sweden, Australia and Britain as well as South Korea concluded in May there was overwhelming evidence that a torpedo attack was the cause.

Russia sent its own experts to Seoul for an independent investigation but has not made the results public.

"Even within the Republic of Korea (South Korea), the reality is that there are individuals who raise doubts against the investigation results based on their own interest, and they are taking irresponsible actions such as spreading groundless accusations," said the report.

It gave detailed technical explanations and evidence related to the sinking.

The defence ministry said it published the report "to inform Koreans and the international community of the truth, and to resolve unnecessary misunderstanding and suspicions".

It said it would distribute the report to the press, parliament, government agencies, embassies and academic groups at home and abroad.

The aim is to let North Korea and the international community know "that even the most covert attack leaves evidence and especially sends a solemn warning to North Korea not to engage in any further military provocations," the ministry said in a statement.

The incident dealt a further blow to cross-border ties that became strained after a conservative government in Seoul took a more hardline stance on Pyongyang.

The South has staged a series of military drills -- either alone or jointly with its US ally -- as a show of strength against the North.

Pyongyang threatened retaliation for the drills, calling them a prelude to an attack.

But in an apparent easing of tensions, the North this month returned a South Korean fishing boat and its seven crew seized a month earlier and requested flood aid from its neighbour.

The South's Red Cross said Monday it would send rice and cement.

The North over the weekend also suggested resuming reunion programmes for families separated during the 1950-53 war.



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S.Korea to propose regular family reunions to N.Korea
Seoul (AFP) Sept 12, 2010
South Korea is to propose that reunions of families separated by the war-time division of the peninsula become a regular fixture, an official said Sunday, a day after Pyongyang suggested re-starting the programme. Officials from South Korea's Red Cross will make the proposal to their counterparts in the north early this week, Unification Ministry Spokeswoman Lee Jong-Joo told AFP. "Duri ... read more







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