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Army soldiers walk up the stairs of their military guard post in Paju, South Korea — near the border with North Korea — on May 3, 2020.
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Gunfire from North Korea didn’t appear to be intentional, South Korea’s Yonhap reports

AP photo / Ahn Young-joon

Gunfire from North Korea didn’t appear to be intentional, South Korea’s Yonhap reports

SEOUL, South Korea — The shots fired from North Korea hit a South Korean guard post inside the Demilitarized Zone are believed to have been accidental, Yonhap news agency reported on Sunday, citing the South Korean military’s Joint Chiefs of Staff.

South Korean troops returned fire and issued broadcast warnings after a guard unit in the town of Cheorwon was hit early Sunday morning, the JCS said.

There were no casualties reported, and a South Korean military official said the shots from the North did not appear to be intentional, according to Yonhap.

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A military officer was cited as saying it was a common time of day for North Korean soldiers to change shifts, and that the weather was foggy at the time.

But Yonhap agency added that there had been no response from Pyongyang on the matter.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Washington believes the gunfire exchanged between North and South Korea was “accidental.”

“We think those were accidental. South Koreans did return fire. So far as we can tell, there was no loss of life on either side,” he told broadcaster ABC.

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The DMZ has separated North and South Korea since the Korean War in the 1950s. The two Koreas have never officially made peace.

The zone is about 2 1/2 miles (4 kilometers) wide and around 155 miles (250 kilometers) long, and the inter-Korean border is heavily guarded.

The incident came a day after North Korean state media reported leader Kim Jong Un’s first public appearance in weeks.

Kim’s absence from the public eye for around three weeks had sparked speculation about his health and questions over what is happening in the isolated nation.

On Sunday, an official from South Korea’s presidential Blue House told journalists that the government did not believe that Kim had undergone any kind of medical procedure, as had been rumored.

“Our view is that there was no surgery,” the official said, adding that there was evidence for this but declining to share it.

Pompeo said “there’s not much that I can share” about what the United States knew about Kim’s activities during his absence. “We know there have been other extended periods of time where Chairman Kim’s been out of public view as well, so it’s not unprecedented.”

But from the images shown on North Korean television, “it looks like Chairman Kim is alive and well,” he said.

Asked if Kim had ever been gravely ill, and if he could “rule out” coronavirus infection or a heart problem, Pompeo said, “I just can’t say anything about that.”

The Washington Post contributed.

First Published: May 4, 2020, 3:57 a.m.

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Army soldiers walk up the stairs of their military guard post in Paju, South Korea — near the border with North Korea — on May 3, 2020.  (AP photo / Ahn Young-joon)
AP photo / Ahn Young-joon
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