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Japanese flock to inspect Korean spy ship
While not necessarily the Korean War circa 1945-1955, (a war that is on
pause). Some might find this interesting. Because some do not have a
subscription to the Daily Telegraph, I have posted the article with out
the picture of the NK ship's stern.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2003/06/02/wkor02.xml&
sSheet=/portal/2003/06/02/ixportal.html
Japanese flock to inspect Korean spy ship
By Colin Joyce in Tokyo
(Filed: 02/06/2003)
Thousands of Japanese queued for hours yesterday to see the rusting hulk
of a North Korean spy ship after it was put on display in Tokyo. The
vessel was sunk after being riddled with bullets by the Japanese
coastguard during a gun battle in December 2001.
Visitors to the exhibit examine the stern of the North Korean spy ship
The ship, retrieved from the sea bed last September, has yielded
fascinating glimpses into how North Korea has repeatedly infiltrated
Japan to spy and to smuggle drugs for hard currency.
In the fashionable O-Daiba area of Tokyo two-hour queues formed as
Japanese flocked to the Maritime Science Museum. People of all ages filed
silently past and took pictures of the 45-foot boat.
Takashi Ueda, who works at the museum, said: "North Korea is on the news
daily here, whether for their nuclear weapons programme or their
abduction of Japanese citizens. There is great interest in this boat and
the North Korean problem. We estimate we have four to five times the
usual number of visitors."
Packets of North Korean cigarettes and a badge of the deceased leader Kim
Il-Sung leave little doubt of the ship's origins. The most chilling piece
of evidence is a small switch labelled "self destruct" in Korean. Japan
believes the crew used this switch to scupper the boat rather than be
captured.
Ten bodies were recovered from the ship but the array of armaments
recovered - dozens of automatic weapons, a surface-to-air missile
launcher and even an underwater scooter capable of carrying up to three
men - indicates that there would have been more people aboard.
The vessel was disguised as a Chinese fishing boat but is believed to
have been smuggling drugs to Japan. Last month a senior North Korean
defector told a US Senate sub-committee how North Korea routinely ran
drugs to neighbouring countries.
North Korean agents are believed to have penetrated Japan over decades to
spy and to buy up technology useful for its weapons programmes. They also
kidnapped Japanese citizens to teach the Japanese language and customs at
spy schools.
Last year, the North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il admitted a dozen
abductions in the 1970s and 1980s and allowed five Japanese to go home.
The tension between North Korea and its neighbours was in evidence again
yesterday when South Korea's navy fired warning shots after eight North
Korean fishing boats crossed the border between the rival nations.
There were no reports of any injuries or damage. The incursion happened
in the Yellow Sea, rich crab fishing grounds where naval gun battles
erupted last June and in 1999.