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North Korea bombs South in fiercest attack in decades
North Korea bombs South in fiercest attack in decades
Two killed; armed forces exchanged fire
SEOUL - North Korea fired a deadly barrage of artillery shells onto a South Korean island on Tuesday in one of the most serious border incidents since the 1950-53 war, inciting global condemnation.
South Korea's military went on top alert, its troops fired back with cannon and the government met in an underground war room, officials said, in response to what Seoul called an atrocity against civilians.
North Korea's supreme command, however, accused South Korea of firing first and vowed "merciless military attacks with no hesitation if the South Korean enemy dares to invade our sea territory by 0.001 mm".
But condemnation of Pyongyang poured in from the United States, which has 28,500 troops in South Korea, along with Russia, Japan and Western Europe. The UN Security Council was to meet in emergency session, a French diplomat said.
China — North Korea's sole major ally and economic prop — urged restraint, and called for the resumption of stalled six-nation talks aimed at dismantling Pyongyang's nuclear drive.
The firing came after North Korea's disclosure of an apparently operational uranium enrichment plant — a second potential way of building a nuclear bomb — which is causing serious alarm for the United States and its allies.
It also comes as North Korea prepares for an eventual dynastic succession from Kim Jong-Il to his youngest son, Kim Jong-Un. The expected transfer is fuelling speculation about the opaque regime's military and nuclear intentions.
The White House said it "strongly condemns" the artillery attack on the border island of Yeonpyeong and was "firmly committed to the defence" of South Korea.
Stephen Bosworth, the U.S. special envoy on North Korea, who was on a visit to Beijing, described the incident as "very undesirable".
South Korean General Lee Hong-Ki accused Pyongyang of a "pre-planned" attack and an "inhumane atrocity that fired random shells towards residential areas of defenceless civilians".
Some 50 shells landed on Yeonpyeong near the tense Yellow Sea border, damaging dozens of houses and sending plumes of thick smoke into the air, YTN television reported.
Two South Korean marines — part of a contingent based permanently on the frontline island — were killed, the military said.
Another 15 marines were wounded along with three civilians, officials said. They said South Korean forces fired 80 rounds back from K-9 self-propelled guns on Yeonpyeong.
Since the shelling was aimed at the island's military base, there were many casualties among soldiers, one marine said.
"A Class-A military alert issued for battle situations was imposed immediately after shelling began," a military spokesman told AFP.
Sporadic firing by each side continued for over an hour before dying out, the military said.
The shelling began at 2:34 pm (12:34 a.m. ET) after the North sent several messages protesting about South Korean exercises being staged south of the border, a presidential spokesman said.
"Flashes along with a thunderous sound were seen here and there across our villages and up to 10 houses were engulfed in flames," said Woo Soo-Woo, 62, who fled to the mainland by ferry along with scores of other islanders. |
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