North Korea soldier shot six times as he defected to South

By AFP   November 13, 2017 | 08:08 pm PT
North Korea soldier shot six times as he defected to South
A South Korean military officer (2nd L), wearing an armband of the Joint Security Area of Panmunjom, looks on as medical members treat an unidentified injured person, believed to be a North Korean soldier who defected, at a hospital in Suwon, south of Seoul, on November 13, 2017. A North Korean soldier was shot and injured by his own side on November 13 while defecting to South Korea at the border truce village of Panmunjom, the South's military said. Photo by AFP/Yonhap/str
The incident took place in broad daylight, as defected soldier found in the South and current undergoing surgeries. 

A North Korean soldier involved in an extremely rare and dramatic defection to the South was shot six times by his own side as he drove to the heavily guarded border and ran across under a hail of bullets.

The US-led United Nations Command (UNC), which monitors the Panmunjom border truce village where the defection occurred Monday, said the soldier had driven close to the heavily-guarded, military demarcation line separating the two Koreas.

"He then exited the vehicle and continued fleeing south across the line as he was fired upon by other soldiers from North Korea," the UNC said in a statement.

An official with the South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff said the North's border guards fired at least 40 rounds.

A doctor treating the soldier -- who was helicoptered to a hospital for emergency surgery -- said he had been shot half-a-dozen times and sustained a serious stomach injury.

"He has at least six gunshot wounds on his body and the penetrating wound in the abdomen is the most serious", the doctor, Lee Cook-Jong, told reporters.

It is very rare for the North's troops to defect at the truce village, a major tourist attraction bisected by the demarcation line and the only part of the frontier where forces from the two sides come face-to-face.

The 1953 ceasefire ending Korean War hostilities was signed at Panmunjom, and it has since hosted numerous rounds of inter-Korean talks -- sometimes held in huts that straddle both sides of the border line.

The fact that the defector drove to the frontier suggests he may not have been a member of the elite corps of North Korean troops posted to Panmunjom, who are carefully vetted and selected for their loyalty.

No tourists were present at the time, because tours do not run on Mondays.

According to the South Korean military there was no exchange of fire across the border, and the UNC statement stressed that no South Korean or US forces were harmed.

The incident, which happened in broad daylight around 4:00pm, comes at a time of heightened tensions on the Korean peninsula over the North's nuclear weapons programme.

Unlike the rest of the frontier, Panmunjom is not fortified with minefields and barbed wire and the border is marked only by a low concrete divider.

After racing across the frontier, the soldier took cover near a building on the South side.

The Joint Chiefs of Staff official said he was found collapsed in a pile of fallen leaves and recovered by three South Korean soldiers crawling on their stomachs to his position.

In 1984, a Soviet citizen sprinted across the border from North Korea to the South at Panmunjom in a defection bid, sparking a gunbattle that killed and wounded several soldiers on both sides.

North Korean soldiers wielding axes hacked two US soldiers to death at Panmunjom in a 1976 brawl over an attempt to trim a tree there.

 
 
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