National
 
    
  
+Login    +Register    +Find Id / Pw Home  l  Archives  l  Learning Times  |  Sitemap  |  Subscription  l  Media Kit  l  PDF
   Home > Newszone > National > Nation Digest >
  National
    Photo News  
    Political Digest  
    Nation Digest  
    Provincial News  
    Defense Affairs  
    Airline News  
    Foreign Affairs / N.Korea  
    History  
    Seoul Air Show  
    Obituary  
    Earth in danger  
    2012 Nuclear Security Summit  
    Icons & influencers  
    The Uncharted Path  
    Global Women's Leadership Conference  
    Essay Contest on 21st Century East Asian Community  
    Dokdo Essay Contest  
    Ieodo Special  
  Biz/Finance
  BusinessFocus
  Technology
  Arts & Living
  Sports
  Opinion
  Community
  Special
  Science
  The Learning Times
     About English News
     iBT TOEFL
     Essay
     
 
   11-16-2009 20:18 여성 음성 남성 음성
Koreas Continue Shipping Despite Naval Skirmish


A North Korean cargo ship discharges sand at a port in Incheon, Monday, in the first commercial shipping exchange between the two Koreas since last week’s naval skirmish in the West Sea. / Korea Times Photo by Ryu Hyo-jin

By Kim Sue-young
Staff Reporter

A North Korean vessel discharged sand at a South Korean port, Monday, the first commercial shipping exchange between the countries after last week's naval skirmish in the West Sea.

The Incheon Port Authority (IPA) said that North Korea's 1,296-ton cargo ship ``Geumbit,'' which means the color of gold in Korean, had docked and unloaded 1,765 tons of silica.

The vessel entered South Korean waters Friday but failed to meet its original schedule because the port was full.

The ship returned home later in the day.

``Over the last two months, three ships, including Geumbit, have used the South Korean port in order to deliver silica,'' an IPA official said.

Sand is one of the most in-demand materials in South Korea to fuel the nation's construction industry.

Last year, the trade volume of sand, the secretive state's largest export item to the South, was valued at about $73.4 million.

The Ministry of Unification has recently strengthened the monitoring of trade in the material given the South's reliance on supplies from outside the country.

A ministry official said South Korean ships have also headed to the North without any restrictions.

``The cargo liner Trade Fortune went to the North on Nov. 10 on schedule,'' she said, asking not to be named.

The official reiterated the government's stance that it will not ``artificially'' adjust exchange and cooperative programs between the two Koreas.

On Nov. 10, the South and North Korean navies exchanged gunfire for the first time in seven years, with no casualties reported by the South Korean navy. A North Korean patrol boat that reportedly crossed the Northern Limit Line, the de-facto border, retreated in flames after a brief firefight.

The reclusive state claimed that the South ``deliberately'' began the clash and vowed to take ``merciless'' military measures to defend its sea border.

The incident was the third naval skirmish between the two countries following those in 1999 and 2002.

ksy@koreatimes.co.kr





무디스, 스페인·伊·포르투갈 신용등급 강등

美 애완동물 전용항공사 PA, 자금난 '허덕'

나노 입자, 건강에 해로울 수 있어

F-15K 운영유지비 무려 10배 급증해

정부, 인턴제 없애는 내용의 입법예고 무기한 연기

삼성, KT 스마트 TV 갈등 고조

숙명여대, 기부금 관련 갈등 휘말려

[단독] 르노삼성, 본사 모델로 한국 공략

NASA, 달 뒤편에 중간기지 건설 검토

밸런타인데이에 받고 싶은건 초콜릿 아니다


 
 
Samsung chairman Lee Kun-hee sued by e..
Moody's cuts ratings on Italy, Portuga..
Samsung CEO sued over inheritance
US court favors Dongguk over Yale
NK defectors in danger of repatriation
BuyING
AhnLab rebuffs claim on stock fraud
Fine dust in Seoul and metropolitan ar..
Judges collectively protest sanctions ..
Match-fixing allegations also emerge f..
(575) Arriving at a restaurant
Money Is Winner
More belt-tightening for Greece