
On Wednesday morning, officials confirmed that six North Korean residents who were sent back across the Northern Limit Line (NLL) into North Korea had arrived safely at their destination. During a press briefing on Thursday, South Korea’s Ministry of Unification spokesperson affirmed that the six individuals transferred to North Korea the previous day had indeed arrived safely. However, they declined to reveal the specific methods used to verify the residents’ arrival. It’s believed that military surveillance assets were employed to confirm this information.
The group consisted of two individuals who drifted south of the NLL while fishing in the Yellow Sea in March and were rescued by South Korean forces, along with four North Korean residents rescued in May after drifting in the East Sea. They were all repatriated to North Korea the day before. The South Korean military and coast guard escorted the vessel they arrived on near the NLL, where North Korean patrol boats took custody of the individuals.
The South Korean government had notified the United Nations Command and North Korea about the repatriation plan twice through direct communication channels, once last week and again this week. Although North Korea did not provide explicit confirmation of the proposed plan, it cooperated with the scheduled timeline for the transfer.