SKorean fatally shot by NKorean soldier
A North Korean soldier fatally shot a South Korean tourist Friday at a mountain resort in the communist north, prompting the South to suspend the high-profile tour program just as the new South Korean president sought to rekindle strained ties between the divided countries.
The news of the shooting of a 53-year-old woman at Diamond Mountain resort emerged just hours after new President Lee Myung-bak delivered a nationwide address calling for restored contacts between the two Koreas, which have been on hold since he took office in February.
The woman had been ordered to halt after entering a military area early Friday at the resort, and ran away before North Korean soldiers opened fire, said South Korea's Unification Ministry spokesman Kim Ho-nyeon, quoting information given by the South Korean company that operates the resort, Hyundai Asan.
Kim said South Korea would suspend future Diamond Mountain tours until it completes an investigation into the case.
The victim was identified only by her last name, Park. Kim said she had left her room at 4:30 a.m. local time, and was shot around 5 a.m. Her body was moved to a hospital in the South Korean city of Sokcho.
Park apparently received gunshots in two parts of her body, ministry official Kim Joong-tae said.
The North had informed Hyundai Asan about the shooting, but there has not yet been any communication from the North Korean government to Seoul officials about the death.
The resort on the peninsula's eastern coast, which opened in 1998, is one of the most high-profile projects between the two Koreas.
Hyundai Asan operates the Diamond Mountain resort as a tourist enclave inside the communist North, complete with South Korean convenience stores and a duty-free shop selling luxury goods. The area is one of two North Korean tourist programs run by the company, which are the only sites inside the reclusive nation that are open to relatively free access by visitors.
About 1.9 million visitors, mostly South Koreans, have visited the site, including some 190,000 people this year, according to the Unification Ministry.
- 1 End of low-cost flying? JetLite, Air Deccan to be phased out soon
- 2 Inflation eases to 12.40 percent; "early signs of moderation" seen, says FinMin
- 3 Brad Pitt with two sons at the Venice Film Festival
- 4 BSE Sensex sheds 248 points on inflation concerns
- 5 Charlize Theron at the screening of the film "Valentino"
- 6 Hindu mobs run amok in Orissa, burn churches, villages
- 7 BSE Sensex tumbles 185 points on inflation, oil concerns
- 1 Currency futures trading kicks off in India
- 2 India's economic growth slips to 7.9 percent in Q1 FY09
- 3 Currency Futures: Trading and Profiting
- 4 Inflation eases to 12.40 percent; "early signs of moderation" seen, says FinMin
- 5 End of low-cost flying? JetLite, Air Deccan to be phased out soon
- 6 ONGC upstages China's Sinopec to acquire Imperial Energy for £1.4 billion
- 7 Infosys Technologies buys UK-based Axon for £407.1 million, aims to become leading SAP service provider
- 1 Christians seek refuge from religious persecution in Orissa
- 2 Pakistan's next president: Mr. 10 Percent?
- 3 First black presidential nominee, Obama says "I will renew America"
- 4 Hindu mobs run amok in Orissa, burn churches, villages
- 5 Rat meat in demand in Cambodia as inflation bites
- 6 2 hijackers of Darfur plane surrender in Libya 21
- 7 Dalai Lama, battling exhaustion, cancels trips
|
|
















South Korea must not linger in past: President


