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Defense minister meets brother of S. Korean official killed by N. Korea

Lee Rae-jin, the elder brother of a South Korean official killed by North Korean soldiers while drifting in its waters in September, speaks to reporters at the defense ministry building in Seoul on Friday, before a closed-door meeting with Defense Minister Suh Wook. (Yonhap)
Lee Rae-jin, the elder brother of a South Korean official killed by North Korean soldiers while drifting in its waters in September, speaks to reporters at the defense ministry building in Seoul on Friday, before a closed-door meeting with Defense Minister Suh Wook. (Yonhap)
Defense minister Suh Wook on Friday met with the elder brother of a South Korean fisheries official killed by North Korea near the western sea border as the bereaved family raised doubts about the government's finding that the slain official attempted to defect to the North.

On Sept. 22, North Korea fatally shot the 47-year-old official, who was adrift on its side of the Yellow Sea, and burned his body, according to the South Korean military. He went missing the previous day while on duty near the western border island of Yeonpyeong.

Suh's meeting with Lee Rae-jin, the brother of the deceased official, came days after the ministry, citing confidentiality, rejected Lee's request for the disclosure of the audio file of a wiretapped conversation among North Korean troops during the incident.

Lee asked for such information, saying he could not believe his brother attempted to defect to the North.

"The defense minister expressed his deep condolences and consolation to the bereaved family over the incident," the ministry said in a statement.

After the 70-minute meeting, Lee said he became all the more confident his brother did not attempt to flee to the North, adding his attorney is preparing to again request the ministry disclose the information.

The ministry provided Lee with other requested information, including the location where his late brother was first spotted by the North and the content of communication that the South's military conducted during the incident.

But Lee called such a disclosure a "mere formality" that lacked key details, denouncing the government for failing to protect its citizen. (Yonhap)

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