North Korea has refused to recognise the so-called Northern Limit
Line that was drawn up at the end of the 1950-53 Korean War and has
frequently challenged it with intrusions of ships, and more recently by
firing artillery near or across the line.
A North Korean patrol
boat crossed into South Korean waters early on Monday and retreated
after the South Korean navy fired warning shots, a South Korean military
official said.
The incursion came amid
heightened tensions on the Korean peninsula, a day after North Korea
fired a long-range rocket carrying a satellite into space, a launch that
South Korea and other countries consider to be a missile test in
disguise.
The patrol boat crossed the
Northern Limit Line, which North Korea does not recognise, in the Yellow
Sea to the west of the peninsula, at 6:55 a.m. (21:55 GMT) near
Socheongdo island, the official said.
Yonhap news agency
said the patrol boat crossed despite warning communications from the
South Korean navy, and retreated after five warning shots were fired by a
naval gun, returning back across the Northern Limit Line at around 7:15
a.m.
North Korea has refused to recognise the
so-called Northern Limit Line that was drawn up at the end of the
1950-53 Korean War and has frequently challenged it with intrusions of
ships, and more recently by firing artillery near or across the line.
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