South Korea has rebuffed North Korea's demand to meet two of its fishermen whose boat strayed into the South's waters.Three North Korean
fishermen were found Saturday in a boat off South Korea's eastern coast,
according to the South's Unification Ministry. Two of the men sought to
stay in the South and one expressed a desire to return to his homeland.That fisherman was sent
back to North Korea through Panmunjom, the border village in the middle
of the Demilitarized Zone on Tuesday, said a Unification Ministry
spokesman.The remaining two are expected to be the subject of a South Korean investigation.On Tuesday, North Korea
sent a fax, demanding to meet the remaining two fishermen, saying that
if their request for a face-to-face meeting was rejected, it would
consider the incident "an act of abduction and take firm action."
South Korean officials
rejected the request, saying it was "not appropriate... because those
two sought to defect to South Korea."North Koreans who come to
South Korea typically go through an investigation, then attend a
settlement support center called Hanawon. At this center, they are
taught how to live in South Korean culture and society. After completing
the six-month program, they are given a resettlement fee of up to
$24,000.In 2013, more than 1,500
North Koreans are known to have defected to South Korea and more than
26,000 are known to have defected overall.
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