Home at last: remains of 28 martyrs return to China

Global Times

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South Korea has returned the remains of Chinese soldiers killed in the 1950-53 Korean War to China on Wednesday at an airport ceremony in Seoul.

It was the fourth batch returned following a handover agreement between the two countries. Since 2014, the remains of 569 soldiers have been returned by South Korea to China, the Yonghap News Agency reported.

Chinese Civil Affairs Vice Minister Sun Shaocheng and South Korean National Defense Vice Minister Hwang In-moo attended the Wednesday ceremony, Yonghap said.

The remains were unearthed between March to November 2016, and DNA tests confirmed the remains were those of the Chinese People's Volunteer Army, the report said.

The Chinese People's Volunteers (CPV) Army joined the North Korean army in the Korean War against the South Korean army and US-led UN forces. 197,653 CPV soldiers have been confirmed killed in the war, with most buried on the Korean Peninsula, the Xinhua News Agency reported in February.

Sun thanked the South Korean defense ministry for its efforts in finding and identifying the remains of Chinese soldiers, and called for deepened friendly cooperation between two countries.

South Korea said it will continue searching for other possible remains in the spirit of humanism, despite strained ties over the North Korean nuclear issue, South Korea Ministry of National Defense said.

An agreement between China and South Korea states that the two sides would consult each other every year on the hand-over of remains of Chinese soldiers found in South Korea. A hand-over is usually held before Chinese Tomb-Sweeping Day in early April, Xinhua said in February's report.