A North Korean soldier defected to the South on Thursday across the Demilitarized Zone that divides the peninsula, Seoul's defence ministry said.
The "low-ranking" soldier made his way across the central part of the land border, a ministry spokesman said.
It came a month after a rare and dramatic defection by a soldier at Panmunjom, the truce village where opposing forces confront each other across a concrete dividing line.
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This file photo taken on November 27, 2017 shows North Korean soldiers staring at South Korean soldiers at the truce village of Panmunjom in the Demilitarized zone (DMZ) dividing the two Koreas. A North Korean soldier defected to the South on December 21, 2017 across the Demilitarized Zone that divides the peninsula, Seoul`s defence ministry said. (AFP-Yonhap) |
On that occasion the defector drove to the heavily-guarded border at speed and ran across under a hail of bullets from his own side. He was hit at least four times.
Footage showed the badly injured man being pulled to safety by two South Korean soldiers who crawled to reach him just south of the demarcation line.
He has since been recovering in hospital in the South.
Thursday's defection was the fourth by a soldier across the DMZ this year.
The soldier appeared at a guard post in thick fog on Thursday morning, the Yonhap news agency cited the South's Joint Chiefs of Staff as saying.
No shots were fired and no unusual movements of Northern troops had been detected, they added.
Away from Panmunjom, the rest of the 4-kilometre-wide DMZ bristles with barbed wire and is littered with minefields, making any crossing extremely hazardous. (AFP)