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North Korean soldier shot while defecting to South Korea

By AFP
13 November 2017   |   9:53 am
A North Korean soldier was shot and injured by his own side Monday while defecting to South Korea at the truce village of Panmunjom, the South's military said.

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. / AFP PHOTO / YONHAP / str / – South Korea OUT 

A North Korean soldier was shot and injured by his own side Monday while defecting to South Korea at the truce village of Panmunjom, the South’s military said.

The soldier crossed to the South side of the Joint Security Area at Panmunjom, the only portion of the border Demilitarised Zone where forces from the two sides come face-to-face, the Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement.

“Our military has taken in a North Korean soldier after he crossed from a North Korea post towards our Freedom House,” the statement said, referring to a building on the South side of the village which is bisected by the border.

The defector was taken to hospital after being shot by another North Korean soldier, the South’s military said. Details of his condition were not immediately available.

Military defections across the heavily fortified DMZ dividing the two Koreas are not uncommon, but they are rare at Panmunjom — a major tourist attraction.

Two North Korean soldiers defected to the South in June after crossing the frontier at another location.

Over the decades since the peninsula was divided, dozens of North Korean soldiers have fled to the South through the DMZ, which extends for two kilometers either side of the actual borderline.

Relations between the two sides have been tense for months, as the North stepped up its missile tests. In September the North carried out its sixth and largest nuclear test, of what it described as a hydrogen bomb.

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