The border separating North and South Korea is heavily fortified
Credit: Ahn Young-joon/AP
In the annals of great escapes, vaulting the barbed wire, heavily-surveilled fence that separates the mined no-man’s land between North and South Korea would surely feature strongly.
According to the South Korean media this week, a defector who evaded security in one of the most dangerous border crossings of the world on November 3 was a former gymnast who managed to swing himself over the imposing barricades, reportedly without triggering key sensors.
The authorities vowed to investigate why high-tech security systems did not work. “We will look into why the sensors did not ring and make sure they operate properly,” an official told Yonhap news agency.
The man, reported to be wearing blue civilian clothes and in his twenties, later surrendered after a manhunt by the South Korean military units who discovered a breach of the fence. He was detained without incident just under a mile south of the fence and has asked for asylum.
South Korean media is reporting that the North Korean man who crossed into the South via DMZ earlier this month was a gymnast. Somehow he was able to jump over the 3 metre fence. All the reports are according to "officials" who apparently had him jump twice to verify the claim.
— Laura Bicker (@BBCLBicker) November 24, 2020
The BBC’s Seoul correspondent, citing local media, said that officials were so taken aback by his feat that they asked him to demonstrate how he was able to jump over the 3-metre fence to verify his claim.
The audacious defection sparked alarm that the high security demilitarised zone (DMZ) that separates North from South had been successfully crossed. The 2.5-mile-wide, 155-mile-long strip is fortified by wire fences, minefields and armed sentry posts.
Few defectors take the dangerous option of trying to break through the zone, with most of the 33,000 who have fled North Korea since the 1990s opting for risky but more achievable routes through China, arriving in the South via a third country, normally Thailand.
The Donga Ilbo news site reported on Monday that the still unidentified man’s athletic background may have influenced his bold decision to make a run for the fence.
The Panmunjom border village has also been the scene of an audacious defection
Credit: Getty Images
Scaling the barrier was only one of the formidable challenges he faced as the area surrounding the actual border line is strewn with minefields. The clearance of an estimated 2 million mines began during a diplomatic détente in 2018 but is still far from complete.
His escape was more low key, however, than the heart-stopping dash of a North Korean soldier in November 2017, who sprinted through a hail of bullets fired by his colleagues to enter the democratic South through Panmunjom, a military-run village that sits on the border. He was badly injured but survived.
The unusual defection attempt of a South Korean fisheries official to the North via the sea border this September ended more tragically when the man was shot by troops who then set his body on fire fearing he was carrying the coronavirus.
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