Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Chinese Korean War remains returned from South Korea

More than 60 years after the end of the Korean war, the remains of 36 Chinese soldiers who died fighting against South Korea are being returned home.
The remains were excavated from graves in Paju, near the North Korean border, last year.



It is the third repatriation since a 2014 agreement between the two countries, as relations improve.
The war drew in China and the Soviet Union on the North's side, and UN forces, led by the US, on the South's.
A ceremony attended by South Korean and Chinese defence officials was held at Seoul's Incheon airport before the remains were flown to the north-eastern Chinese city of Shenyang, where China has a cemetery for its war dead.

The remains of Chinese and North Korean soldiers have continued to be discovered over the last six decades, where they were killed, often in remote woods in bleak by-now-overgrown dug-outs, the BBC's Stephen Evans in Seoul says.
Scientists work to identify them by analysing uniforms or ammunition, but often fail to put a name to the fallen soldier, our correspondent adds.
The 505 sets of remains flown back since the 2014 deal, have all been sent ahead of the annual Chinese Qingming, or tomb-sweeping, festival, which this year falls on 4 April.

No comments:

Post a Comment