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Chinese skipper kills S. Korean coastguard: officials
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Dec 12, 2011


A Chinese fishing boat skipper stabbed a South Korean coastguard officer to death and wounded another officer on Monday as they tried to arrest him for illegal fishing, officials said.

It was the second time in less than four years that a South Korean coastguard officer had been killed, amid increasingly violent clashes in the rich fishing grounds of the Yellow Sea which separates the two countries.

South Korea summoned Chinese ambassador Zhang Xinsen to lodge a strong protest, the foreign ministry said.

"This should have not happened. This is extremely tragic," a presidential spokesman told reporters.

The 41-year-old victim surnamed Lee was rushed by helicopter to hospital in the city of Incheon west of Seoul but died of organ failure.

The coastguard said it launched an operation early Monday to seize two Chinese fishing boats 85 kilometres (around 55 miles) off Socheong island, and managed to take control of a 66-tonne boat.

But the other boat suddenly rammed the seized vessel, prompting nine Chinese fishermen on board the captured boat to start attacking officers.

The 42-year-old captain broke a window on his vessel and stabbed the officers with a shard of glass, according to initial reports.

Lee suffered fatal injuries while the other victim, a 33-year-old, was stabbed in the stomach and was undergoing hospital treatment.

The coastguard later said the captain has been arrested for murder and violating the South's exclusive economic zone, and that it was unclear whether he used a shard of glass or another weapon.

"All crew will be detained for investigation and another boat that was at the scene has been seized so that its crew will be questioned about whether they were involved in the crime," said Ahn Sung-Shik, an investigator with the Incheon coastguard.

During his meeting with ambassador Zhang, First Vice Foreign Minister Park Suk-Hwan "strongly demanded that the Chinese government strictly clamp down on illegal fishing and the illegal acts of Chinese fishermen", a ministry spokesman said.

Park also urged Beijing to express regret at the incident and promise to prevent similar situations.

In Beijing, foreign ministry spokesman Liu Weimin said China is ready to work closely with South Korea and handle the case "properly".

"China has taken measures to enhance the education of Chinese fishermen and management of outbound fishing boats to prohibit cross-border fishing and irregularities," he said.

He also urged South Korea to "fully protect Chinese legitimate rights and interests of Chinese fishermen and provide them with due humanitarian treatment".

South Korean coastguard chief Mo Gang-Il vowed to take strong steps against illegal Chinese fishing, describing Monday's incident as "very serious".

Illegal fishing by Chinese vessels is common in South Korean waters, with 475 boats seized so far this year compared with 370 in the whole of last year, according to official figures.

In October the coastguard said it used tear gas and rubber bullets to subdue Chinese fishermen wielding clubs and shovels. Some 21 Chinese were detained but later released after paying a fine.

In December 2010 a Chinese boat overturned and sank in the Yellow Sea after ramming a South Korean coastguard vessel. Two Chinese crewmen were killed.

Three Chinese detained after that incident were freed following protests from Beijing.

In September 2008 a South Korean officer drowned while trying to inspect a Chinese boat.

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US envoy says North Korea 'must change behaviour'
Tokyo (AFP) Dec 12, 2011 - The United States will consider meeting North Korean officials if they make good on nuclear disarmament pledges, but they first "must change their behaviour", a top US envoy said Monday.

"The basic, most important point that has to be underscored is that it's really up to North Korea to take the right steps," Glyn Davies, the US special representative on North Korea, told reporters after meeting Japanese officials.

"They need to change their behaviour. They need to cease their provocative actions. They need to fulfil their obligations to de-nuclearise," he added.

The nuclear-armed North, having alarmed South Korea, the United States and others with revelations about its uranium enrichment programme, wants six-party disarmament talks to resume.

Pyongyang says the enrichment is aimed at producing electricity but critics fear the project could give the isolated communist state a second way to make weapons in addition to its existing plutonium-based bombs.

Washington may "soon" review Pyongyang's calls to re-start the talks, which involve the United States, China, the two Koreas, Japan and Russia, Davies said. But he added: "We are not there. We still have some ground to cover."

The North quit the negotiations in April 2009, a month before staging its second atomic weapons test.

"We may have a chance in a coming period relatively soon to test their proposition that North Korea is ready to do the right thing... so that we can begin to contemplate an eventual return to six-party talks," said Davies, a former ambassador to the International Atomic Energy Agency who took up his current post in October.

The diplomat, who visited Seoul before Tokyo on an Asian tour that will next take him to Beijing, also met with families of Japanese nationals abducted by North Korea in the 1970s and 1980s, reportedly for training as communist spies.



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N. Korea warns against Christmas lights near border
Seoul (AFP) Dec 11, 2011
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