Asia-Pacific

25 SKoreans face punishment over sinking of ship

(Agencies)
Updated: 2010-06-11 07:14
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25 SKoreans face punishment over sinking of ship
Members of a right-wing association of former special military commandos, hold national flags nearby ribbons bearing names of their fallen fellow soldiers during a rally on eve of South Korea's annual Memorial Day in Seoul, South Korea, Saturday, June 5, 2010. [Agencies]


SEOUL - South Korea's audit agency told the defense minister to punish 25 top military officials for failing to ensure combat readiness ahead of the deadly sinking of a South Korean warship blamed on the Democratic People's Republic of Korea(DPRK), an official said Thursday.

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A team of international investigators concluded last month that a torpedo from a DPRK's submarine tore apart and sank the vessel near the two Koreas' disputed sea border on March 26, killing 46 South Korean sailors. It was one of South Korea's worst military disasters since the 1950-53 Korean War.

The Board of Audit and Inspection said Thursday it told Defense Minister Kim Tae-young a day earlier to "take appropriate steps, including disciplinary action" against the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, 22 other senior officers and two civilian ministry officials for negligence.

Park Soo-won, a senior BAI official, said that the military had expected that a DPRK's submarine or submersible vessel could secretly attack a South Korean ship near the sea border following a naval skirmish in November that left one DPRK's soldier dead and three others wounded.

However, the navy and the Joint Chiefs of Staff did not take appropriate countermeasures and neglected combat readiness, Park said.

The audit agency also blamed the military for delaying its first report on the incident to the Joint Chiefs of Staff, its chairman and the defense minister. The military also did not correctly relay information to its higher commands, the agency said.

The announcement, part of an interim report, came days after DPRK sent the UN Security Council a letter warning the world body not to open debate on the Cheonan's sinking.

South Korea last week officially asked the Security Council to punish DPRK. DPRK denies responsibility for the sinking and says any punishment would trigger war.

Sin Son Ho -- DPRK's permanent representative at the UN -- sent Security Council president Claude Heller a letter Tuesday saying the council must not open a debate on the "the unilaterally forged" investigation results because that would infringe upon the country's sovereignty, the official Korean Central News Agency said Wednesday.

Sin said the Security Council instead should take steps to get South Korea and the US accept DPRK's inspectors to verify the investigation results, it said.

South Korea late last month announced a series of steps to punish Pyongyang, including curtailing trade and resuming propaganda operations. The government resumed radio broadcasts into its northen neighbor, but has so far stopped short of sending leaflets or starting broadcasts via loudspeaker across the border.