Another North Korean ‘ghost ship’ washes up in Japan

Three dead fishermen from Kim Jong-un’s regime have washed up on Japanese shores.

Rickety North Korean fishing boats have been washing up at an alarming rate over the past few weeks which has prompted Japanese authorities to step up patrols.

Twenty-eight of the vessels – dubbed ‘ghost boats’ – were detected in November, up from just four in November last year. 

The three bodies were recovered in northern Japan on Monday, just days after authorities found a dilapidated empty boat and eight other bodies.

A wooden boat is left after being washed ashore in Tsuruoka, Yamagata prefecture, northern Japan on Monday

The skeletal remains of eight men were discovered on this wooden fishing boat which washed up in Japan on Monday and is believed to have come from North Korea

The skeletal remains of eight men were discovered on this wooden fishing boat which washed up in Japan on Monday and is believed to have come from North Korea

It is just the latest North Korean boat to have ended up in Japanese waters this month, as mystery remains over why so many have found themselves adrift

It is just the latest North Korean boat to have ended up in Japanese waters this month, as mystery remains over why so many have found themselves adrift

 

The coast guard said a Japanese fishing boat picked up a male body floating off the coast of Sakata in Yamagata prefecture and two more bodies washed up on a nearby beach an hour and half later. 

The bodies were decomposed, but one had a lapel pin thought to be North Korean.

Officials are investigating if the bodies were from the severely damaged boat that washed ashore Saturday.

Winds and water currents push dozens of boats onto Japan’s northern coasts annually. 

Usually, only the boats or fragments wash ashore, and it is very rare for survivors to be rescued and brought ashore by the Japanese.

The increase may be related to a campaign pushed by leader Kim Jong-un to boost fish harvests as a means of increasing sources of protein for the nation, which continues to fall short of food self-sufficiency and remains vulnerable to health problems caused by the lack of a varied, balanced diet.

In order to reach their quotas, the North Korean fishermen may be taking more risks and venturing farther from their usual waters.

Japanese authorities are also holding 18 people who claim to be North Korean from two other boats.  

The first batch of 10 landed on a small uninhabited island off southern Hokkaido on a damaged fishing boat and allegedly stole electronic appliances and other items from an unmanned shelter while temporarily taking refuge from rough seas. 

Japan’s coast guard rescued them last week.

Eight other survivors managed to reach shore in Akita on a ragged boat – which is believed to have fallen apart and sunk soon after they were rescued – have been transferred to immigration custody.

Japanese officials said the 10 are being investigated for possible theft, while the other eight are expected to be sent home via China.

At the end of November, a wooden vessel containing eight skeletons and bearing markings in the Korean alphabet came ashore in northern Japan on Monday.

Another vessel carrying eight fishermen landed in the same prefecture on Friday last week, while two more ships were found adrift on November 19 and 13 in the ocean further north.

Between November 15 and 17 another two capsized boats were found by the Japanese coast guard off the Noto Peninsula, in central Japan.

On that occasion seven bodies were recovered while three North Korean fisherman were saved, the Kyodo News Agency reports.

The three survivors were returned to another North Korea vessel after expressing a wish to go home, the agency reported, meaning they were not trying to defect.

The eight men rescued last week have also requested to go home, authorities said. 

This boat was discovered on Monday, another washed ashore on Friday, while four were discovered the previous week - including two which capsized

This boat was discovered on Monday, another washed ashore on Friday, while four were discovered the previous week – including two which capsized

Eight North Korea squid fishermen were discovered on this vessel last week and said they had been adrift for a month after losing engine power

Eight North Korea squid fishermen were discovered on this vessel last week and said they had been adrift for a month after losing engine power

Questioned by Japanese officials they revealed they had left port in North Korea a month ago in order to fish squid, before losing engine power.

Cast adrift, they had somehow managed to survive stormy seas on a dilapidated wooden vessel before landing in Akita Prefecture, where they were picked up.

Satoru Miyamoto, an expert on North Korea, told CNN that the sudden increase in ‘ghost ships’ may be due to Kim Jong-un expanding his fisheries to provide more income for the armed forces.

‘They are using old boats manned by the military, by people who have no knowledge about fishing. It will continue,’ he said.

Three North Koreans were rescued while another seven drowned after two vessels were found capsized between November 15 and 17, Japanese media said

Three North Koreans were rescued while another seven drowned after two vessels were found capsized between November 15 and 17, Japanese media said

It comes amid international sanctions aimed at choking off some of North Korea’s main sources of income following a series of missile tests and a nuclear blast.

The last time a large number of vessels washed ashore in Japan was in 2015, when around a dozen boats – many containing bodies – arrived.

Reports at the time claimed the bodies could belong to desperate fishermen driven into treacherous waters by food shortages, while other suggested a refugee exodus from the hermit state, Newsweek reports.

Pyongyang has denied any of its fishermen were trying to flee, and said all deaths had come as the result of navigational errors. 



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