South
Korean rescuers search for missing sailors after bodies of two are found along
with three survivors
theguardian.com,
Associated Press in Seoul, Friday 4 April 2014
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| South Korean container ship: the Mongolian-flagged North Korean ship was carrying 16 crew when it sent a distress signal. Photograph: Jung Yeon-Je/ AFP/Getty Images |
The bodies
of two North Korean sailors and three survivors have been found off the coast
of South Korea after their cargo ship sank. South Korean rescuers are searching
for 11 others still missing.
The
Mongolian-flagged ship was carrying 16 North Korean crew members when it sent a
distress signal in international waters about 80 miles (130km) south of the
southern port city of Yeosu, South Korea's coastguard said in a statement.
Three
people were rescued and told investigators they escaped from the ship as it was
tilting with its freight being pushed to one side.
South
Korean coastguard officers said high waves and strong winds were reported in
the area where the 4,300-ton ship sank. It was carrying iron ore to China from
the North Korean port city of Chongjin.
The South
Korean coastguard said it had mobilised 13 vessels and six aircraft to search
for the missing crew. Bad weather was still hampering rescue operations,
according to the coastguard officers.
It was not
immediately known how South Korea would handle the rescued North Korean
sailors. Seoul usually repatriates North Korean sailors found drifting in South
Korean waters if they want to return home.
All three
rescued sailors were taken to a hospital on the southern South Korean island of
Jeju and none of them was in a life-threatening condition, the coastguard
statement said.
The Korean
peninsula remains in a technical state of war as the 1950-53 Korean war ended
with an armistice, not a peace treaty. On Monday, the rival Koreas fired
hundreds of artillery shells into each other's waters.

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