South Korea Police Arrests Defector Trying to Cross back to North Korea

South Korean police said they had arrested a defector who tried to return to North Korea. (Reuters file photo)
South Korean police said they had arrested a defector who tried to return to North Korea. (Reuters file photo)
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South Korea Police Arrests Defector Trying to Cross back to North Korea

South Korean police said they had arrested a defector who tried to return to North Korea. (Reuters file photo)
South Korean police said they had arrested a defector who tried to return to North Korea. (Reuters file photo)

South Korean police said on Sunday they had arrested a defector who tried to return to North Korea after a similar, successful crossing in July escalated tensions on the peninsula.

The defector, who had fled to South Korea in 2018, was suspected of breaking into a military training site in South Korea’s border town of Cheorwon on Thursday to head back to North Korea.

“The man is under police investigation. We are looking into details such as why he tried to cross the border,” a policewoman said by telephone. She said she could not confirm the date of the arrest.

In July, a 24-year-old defector returned to North Korea the way he left in 2017, going through a drainage ditch and swimming across the Han River to the North.

When the 24-year-old defector illegally returned to North Korea in July, the “runaway” prompted the government to launch an investigation into the military unit responsible for the crossing.



Romania, Bulgaria Fully Join EU's Borderless Schengen Zone

A general view of the Durankulak border point between Bulgaria and Romania, 01 January 2025. EPA/VASSIL DONEV
A general view of the Durankulak border point between Bulgaria and Romania, 01 January 2025. EPA/VASSIL DONEV
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Romania, Bulgaria Fully Join EU's Borderless Schengen Zone

A general view of the Durankulak border point between Bulgaria and Romania, 01 January 2025. EPA/VASSIL DONEV
A general view of the Durankulak border point between Bulgaria and Romania, 01 January 2025. EPA/VASSIL DONEV

Romania and Bulgaria scrapped land border controls to become full members of the European Union's Schengen free-travel area on Wednesday, joining an expanded bloc of countries whose residents can travel without passport checks.
Fireworks lit the sky at a crossing close to the Bulgarian border town of Ruse just after the stroke of midnight as the Bulgarian and Romanian interior ministers symbolically raised a barrier on the Friendship Bridge straddling the Danube River, Reuters reported. The crossing is a major transit point for international trade.
Checks on travelling by air and sea from Bulgaria and Romania were lifted in March 2024, but land checks continued until Austria last month dropped a veto it had maintained on the grounds that more was needed to stop irregular migration.
Border checks between France, Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg were first dropped in 1985. The Schengen area now covers 25 of the 27 EU member states, as well as Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland.
Ireland and Cyprus are not members of the Schengen zone.