Search for 50 sailors after S Korea warship sinks

Almost 50 sailors are missing after a South Korean warship sank near the tense border with North Korea.

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Almost 50 sailors are missing after a South Korean warship sank near the tense border with North Korea, the military said today, but officials said there was no sign so far the North was to blame. The president Lee Myung-Bak called an emergency security meeting and ordered a swift and thorough probe into what appeared to be one of the country's worst military tragedies for decades. The Joint Chief of Staff (JCS) said 58 sailors had been rescued but 46 others were still missing as of mid-afternoon today.

"Many of the missing people might have been trapped inside the sunken ship," JCS spokesman Lee Ki-Sik told a parliament committee. A team of 18 navy divers had started an underwater examination to investigate the cause of the sinking in the Yellow Sea, another JCS official said. The 1,200-tonne corvette sank on Friday evening near Baengnyeong island after a still unexplained explosion. The craft turned turtle, with its hull protruding from the shallow but near-freezing waters.

Reports said the 88-metre (290-foot) craft would have been carrying French-made Exocet and US-made Harpoon anti-ship missiles as well as torpedos and other weaponry. The military said 13 of the 58 known survivors were injured but in stable condition. Navy ships and surveillance planes were searching for more survivors. The military said there were no abnormal military movements at the time on the North Korean side of the disputed maritime border, the scene of deadly naval clashes in 1999 and 2002.

"We are detecting no abnormal movement from North Korea," a JCS spokesman Park Sung-Woo said. A JCS officer Lee Ki-Shik told journalists the military was "very cautious about pointing fingers at North Korea or any other causes at the moment." Baek Seung-Joo, an analyst at the defence ministry's Korea Institute for Defence Analyses, said the government appeared to suspect an accident rather than sabotage.

*AFP