REUTERS
October 12, 2019 at 17:45 JST
A fishing boat that later collided with a Japanese patrol vessel floats off the northwestern coast of the Noto Peninsula, Ishikawa prefecture, on Oct. 7. (Fisheries Agency via AP)
SEOUL-- North Korea's foreign ministry "strongly demanded" on Saturday that Japan pay compensation for a fishing boat that sank when it collided with a Japanese patrol boat earlier this week, North Korean state media reported.
The collision on Monday was deliberate and "a gangster act" by Japan and Tokyo should take steps to prevent future incidents, a spokesman for the foreign ministry said in a statement carried by state news agency KCNA.
"We strongly demand that the Japanese government compensate for the infliction of the material damage by sinking our vessel," the unnamed spokesman said. "If such an incident occurs again, Japan will face an undesirable consequence."
The Japanese coast guard said on Monday it rescued about 60 North Korean crew members from a fishing boat that sank after it collided with the patrol boat that was chasing it out of Japanese waters.
The foreign ministry official disputed Japan's claim that a sharp turn by the North Korean boat caused the accident.
The fishing boat was "on a normal navigation," the official said in the statement.
"Japan is impatiently trying to justify its deliberate act, and it even acts like a guilty party filing the suit first," the official said. "Yet, they cannot evade from their responsibility for this incident of sinking our vessel and threatening even the safety of its crew."
At the time, Japanese authorities said the North Korean boat was fishing illegally in Japan’s exclusive economic zone.
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