BBC News, 21
May 2013
Korea
crisis
A Chinese
fishing crew seized by North Koreans two weeks ago has been freed along with
their boat, reports say.
The 16-man
crew was taken captive by unidentified North Koreans in the Yellow Sea on 5
May.
China said
on Monday it had been negotiating with Pyongyang for their release since 10
May.
All were
"safe on their way back", China's Xinhua news agency reported. Boat
owner Yu Xuejun told Reuters news agency no ransom had been paid.
He had
earlier said that the North Koreans were demanding a 600,000 yuan ($100,000;
£66,000) ransom, and that he had received eight calls demanding payment.
"There
were no conditions and they didn't take any money," he told Reuters.
"They just released them all. I received the call from the ship captain
this morning at 03:50 telling me that they had already been released."
Last year,
in a similar incident, 29 Chinese fishermen and three vessels were seized by
unidentified North Koreans.
They were
freed after two weeks and it was not clear whether a ransom had been paid, nor
whether the captors had been the North Korean authorities or autonomous
kidnappers.
China is
North Korea's biggest trading partner and closest ally. But ties between the
two have chilled in recent months, in the wake of North Korea's third nuclear
test on 12 February.
Beijing
backed expanded sanctions against Pyongyang in response to the underground
test, and some of its banks have suspended trading with North Korea's key
foreign exchange bank.
Overall
tensions on the peninsula remain high following the nuclear test, with
operations at the joint inter-Korean Kaesong industrial complex suspended.
In recent
days North Korea has fired six short range missiles off its east coast, as part
of what it says are military exercises.

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