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   05-04-2009 23:57 여성 음성 남성 음성
S. Korean Navy Saves N. Korean Ship

By Jane Han
Staff Reporter

A South Korean naval warship chased away pirates who were seeking to hijack a North Korean vessel in seas off Somalia Monday, according to Seoul's military officials, an incident that comes amid increasingly tense relations between the two Koreas.

After receiving a distress signal from the North Korean vessel, the South Korean destroyer, Mummu the Great, which was only 3 kilometers away from the suspected pirate ship, dispatched a Lynx helicopter with snipers on board.

The pirates retreated when the snipers threatened to open fire, the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said in a statement.

The South Korean ship continued to guide the North Korean ship at its request, and later received a thank you message from the North Koreans.

The two sides reportedly exchanged numerous messages back and forth, a rare instance of communication and cooperation, especially at a time when Pyongyang's nuclear weapons program and recent controversial rocket launch has worsened already-icy relations.

The 2,100-ton South Korean destroyer has been escorting cargo vessels in the region since April. This is the third time that the naval unit has thwarted pirates. Last month, it helped a Marshall Islands-registered ship and a Danish vessel after receiving distress calls.

About two dozen hijackings have occurred this year off the coast of Somalia, according to the U.S. navy.

Somalia has been without a functional government since its dictator was overthrown in 1991, fueling piracy and poverty amid lawlessness there.

jhan@koreatimes.co.kr





yistory@koreatimes.co.kr

법원 "의약품 '리베이트'는 과세 대상"

檢, 김효재 前수석 15일 오전 소환

경찰, 이태원 등 외국인 밀집지역 특별관리

한국에 대해 무엇이든 답변해 주는 블로거가 있다

"빌 클린턴, 르윈스키 첫만남부터 불꽃 튀어"

'대통령 찬양' 댓글 알바들 딱 걸렸다

"北 휴대전화 요금이 무려... 놀라운 변화"

SNS에 '김정은 암살설'… 근거없다

美 '팝의 여왕' 휘트니 휴스턴 사망


 
 
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