The Star Malaysia

Lee visits island near border with North Korea

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SEOUL South Korean President Lee Myung-bak made a surprise visit to an island near the tense border with North Korea that was shelled by Pyongyang two years ago.

Stressing the need to defend the maritime border “to the last man,” Lee said the 2010 attack on Yeonpyeong island was an example of North Korea’s tendency to launch isolated, provocativ­e assaults out of the blue.

His visit and comments are likely to fuel cross-border tensions, already raised by a series of niggling maritime confrontat­ions, defections and a new US-South Korean deal to nearly triple the range of the South’s missile systems.

“The reason that we build up (the military) is not only to bolster our means to retaliate but to prevent the North’s provocatio­n,” Lee was quoted as saying by Yonhap news agency.

“If North Korea provokes us, we have to retaliate strongly. We always have to remain vigilant,” he said, as he inspected an anti-artillery radar unit and artillery company on the island.

There are widespread concerns in the South that Pyongyang may try to instigate a military clash that would temporaril­y destabilis­e the Korean peninsula in the run up to South Korea’s presidenti­al election in December.

The North shelled Yeonpyeong – near the disputed maritime border in the Yellow Sea – on Nov 23, 2010, leaving two South Korean soldiers and two civilians dead.

The South retaliated with its own artillery bombardmen­t on two targets in the North, triggering fears that the incident could provoke a wider conflict. — AFP

 ?? — AP ?? Closer look: Lee looking into North Korea from an observatio­n post as Defence Minister Kim Kwan-jin (right) looks on at Yeonpyeong Island.
— AP Closer look: Lee looking into North Korea from an observatio­n post as Defence Minister Kim Kwan-jin (right) looks on at Yeonpyeong Island.

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