angeliclight
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The North Korean military has been given orders to hijack South Korean fishing boats near the Northern Limit Line (NLL), a South Korean government official told the JoongAng Ilbo on Tuesday.
“I believe that the North Koreans wish to take our citizens hostage and return them in exchange for the four North Koreans, among the 31 who drifted across the maritime border this past February, who defected,” said the government source. “The South Korean government and the military shared this tip last week. We have our guard up as the North Korean leadership has handed down this order.”
The South Korean government has reinforced instructions to fishermen near the NLL to avoid letting their boats drift into the area.
Seoul believes North Korea is determined to get the four back in order to prevent their defections from discrediting the regime. Officials have also said that the defections during the pro-democracy movements in the Middle East and North Africa have caused anguish in Pyongyang.
North Korea asked for Red Cross talks between the South and North in order to discuss the return of the four defectors, but Seoul refused. The South Korean government has repeatedly told the North that the four North Koreans chose to remain in the South on their own.
A day before the request for Red Cross talks, the 27 North Koreans who were repatriated held a press conference and insisted the South Korean government had tried to persuade the group to stay in the South. Pyongyang also reported that the South Korean military had beaten the North Koreans and forced them off their boat.
“There is a chance that the North may kidnap a South Korean in the Kaesong Industrial Complex,” said the government source. The last time a South Korean from the Kaesong Industrial Complex was held captive in the North was in March 2009. Yoo Seong-jin was kept hostage in the North for 136 days for “criticizing the political regime of the republic and corrupting a female worker,” North Korea had said.
Sources have said that the North has stepped up its surveillance of the Kaesong complex since last month.
“I believe that the North Koreans wish to take our citizens hostage and return them in exchange for the four North Koreans, among the 31 who drifted across the maritime border this past February, who defected,” said the government source. “The South Korean government and the military shared this tip last week. We have our guard up as the North Korean leadership has handed down this order.”
The South Korean government has reinforced instructions to fishermen near the NLL to avoid letting their boats drift into the area.
Seoul believes North Korea is determined to get the four back in order to prevent their defections from discrediting the regime. Officials have also said that the defections during the pro-democracy movements in the Middle East and North Africa have caused anguish in Pyongyang.
North Korea asked for Red Cross talks between the South and North in order to discuss the return of the four defectors, but Seoul refused. The South Korean government has repeatedly told the North that the four North Koreans chose to remain in the South on their own.
A day before the request for Red Cross talks, the 27 North Koreans who were repatriated held a press conference and insisted the South Korean government had tried to persuade the group to stay in the South. Pyongyang also reported that the South Korean military had beaten the North Koreans and forced them off their boat.
“There is a chance that the North may kidnap a South Korean in the Kaesong Industrial Complex,” said the government source. The last time a South Korean from the Kaesong Industrial Complex was held captive in the North was in March 2009. Yoo Seong-jin was kept hostage in the North for 136 days for “criticizing the political regime of the republic and corrupting a female worker,” North Korea had said.
Sources have said that the North has stepped up its surveillance of the Kaesong complex since last month.