Korean Air Flight 858 | |
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A Boeing 707, similar to the Korean Air aircraft, registered HL7406, involved in the bombing. |
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Location | The Andaman Sea |
Date | 29 November 1987 2.05pm (KST) |
Target | Korean Air Boeing 707-3B5C |
Attack type | Bombing |
Deaths | 115 (all)[1] |
Perpetrator(s) | Kim Hyon Hui and Kim Sung Il, acting on behalf of the Government of North Korea |
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Korean Air Flight 858 was a scheduled international passenger flight between Baghdad, Iraq, and Seoul, South Korea that exploded in mid-air on 29 November 1987 after two North Korean agents planted a bomb in the passenger cabin. The two agents, acting upon orders from the North Korean government, planted the device in an overhead locker before disembarking the aircraft during the first stop-over in Abu Dhabi, UAE. While the aircraft was flying over the Andaman Sea to its second stop-over in Bangkok, Thailand, the bomb activated and destroyed the Korean Air Boeing 707-3B5C, registration number HL7406. All 104 passengers and 11 crew members aboard were killed. The attack occurred 34 years after the Korean Armistice Agreement that ended the Korean War, on 27 July 1953.
The two bombers were traced to Bahrain, where they both attempted to smoke cigarettes laced with cyanide when they realised they were about to be taken into custody. The male of the pair died, but the female, Kim Hyon Hui, confessed to the bombing. She was sentenced to death after being put on trial for the attack, but was later pardoned by the President of South Korea, Roh Tae-woo, who said, "The persons who ought to be on trial here are the leaders of North Korea. This child is as much a victim of this evil regime as the passengers aboard KAL 858." Kim's testimony implicated Kim Jong-il, former leader of North Korea, to be ultimately responsible for the incident. The United States State Department specifically refers to the bombing of KAL 858 as a "terrorist act" and, until 2008, listed North Korea as a Designated State Sponsor of Terrorism.
Since the attack, relations between the Koreas have not greatly improved, although progress has been made in the form of two Inter-Korean Summits. Kim later released a book, The Tears of My Soul, in which she recalled being trained in an espionage school run by the North Korean Army, and being told to carry out the attack personally by Jong-il. She now resides in exile, and under constant tight security, fearing for attacks from families of the victims of the attack. "Being a culprit I do have a sense of agony with which I must fight," she said at a press conference in 1990. "In that sense I must still be a prisoner or a captive—of a sense of guilt."
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On 12 November 1987, the two North Korean agents traveled from Pyongyang, the capital city of North Korea, on an airliner, to Moscow, Russia.[2] There, they left for Budapest the following morning, where they stayed in the home of a North Korean agent for six days.[2] On 18 November, the pair traveled to Vienna by car. After crossing the Austrian border, the guidance officer who they had stayed with in Budapest gave the pair two forged Japanese passports. Posing as tourists staying in the Am Parkring Hotel in Vienna, the two purchased tickets from Austrian Airlines, for flights which would take them from Vienna to Belgrade, Yugoslavia, then on to Baghdad, Abu Dhabi, and finally Bahrain.[2] They also purchased tickets from Abu Dhabi to Rome, Italy, which they would use to escape after planting the bomb on the KAL flight.[2]
On 23 November the two left Vienna on an Austrian Airlines flight for Belgrade, where they stayed in a hotel. During their time in the city, they purchased two more airline tickets, which were intended to allow them to return to Vienna via Rome following the bombing.
On 27 November, two guidance officers who had arrived in Yugoslavia by train from Vienna gave them the time bomb,[3] a Panasonic transistor radio made in Japan, which contained explosives, a detonator and a bottle of liquid explosive[4] intended to intensify the blast, disguised as a bottle of liquor. The next day, they left Belgrade for Saddam International Airport, Baghdad, on an Iraqi Airways flight.[3] At Saddam, they waited three hours and 30 minutes for the arrival of KAL 858 — the target of their operation — which took off at around 11:30 p.m.[3] The two bombers planted the improvised explosive device above their seats, 7B and 7C, and disembarked the aircraft at Abu Dhabi International Airport.[3]
On the second leg of the flight, from Abu Dhabi to Thailand, KAL 858 was carrying 104 passengers and 11 crew members.[1] At around 2:05 p.m. Korea Standard Time (KST),[3] towards the end of the flight, the bomb detonated and the aircraft exploded over the Andaman Sea (), killing all 115 on board.[5] The bomb exploded nine hours after it was planted,[5] and shortly after the pilot of the aircraft transmitted his final radio message: "We expect to arrive in Bangkok on time. Time and location normal."[3] 113 of the people aboard were South Korean nationals, along with an Indian national and a Lebanese national.[6] Many of the 113 South Korean nationals were young workers who were returning to their home country after working for several years in the construction industry in the Middle East.[6] A South Korean diplomat, who worked at the embassy in Baghdad, and his wife, were also aboard the flight,[6] though it is not known if they were the prime targets of the attack.[7] Wreckage from the flight was washed up on a beach in Thailand.[8] The flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder were not located.[7]
After the attack, the bombers attempted to fly from Abu Dhabi to Amman — the first leg of their planned escape route — but there were complications with airport authorities regarding their visas,[3] and they were forced to fly to Bahrain, where they agreed they would travel to Rome.[3][9] However, the bombers' passports were identified as forgeries at the airport in Bahrain.[3] Realising that they would be taken into custody, they both immediately attempted to smoke cyanide-laced cigarettes to kill themselves.[5] The male was rushed to hospital where he was pronounced dead,[9] but the female suspect, 25-year-old Kim Hyon Hui, survived, after police grabbed the cigarette from her mouth.[5]
According to testimony at a United Nations Security Council meeting, on 15 December 1987, Kim was transferred to Seoul, where she recovered from the poison and, initially, said she was a Chinese orphan who grew up in Japan, and said that she was not connected to the attack.[5][10] Authorities grew more suspicious when, while being questioned in Bahrain, she attacked a police officer and attempted to grab his firearm, before being apprehended.[5] At the hearing, the main evidence against Kim was the cigarettes, which, analysis showed, were the type used by a number of other North Korean agents apprehended in South Korea.[5][10]
Speaking at the United Nations Security Council, Choi Young-jin, representing South Korea, said that after eight days of interrogation in South Korea, she was permitted to see a film of life in the country on a television screen, and realized that "life ... on the streets of Seoul was entirely different from what she had been led to believe. She began to realize that what she had been told while living in the North was totally untrue."[10] Kim then "threw herself into the arms of a female investigator" and confessed to the bombing.[10] In Korean, she said, "Forgive me. I am sorry. I will tell you everything,"[10] and said that she had been "exploited as a tool for North Korean terrorist activities", and made a detailed and voluntary confession.[10]
“ | Workers and businessmen alike, Government officials and diplomats, all stake their lives on the wings of civil airliners ... Therefore, any State-directed terrorist threat ... is naturally fraught with dangers for world stability and peace. | ” |
—Choi Young-jin, representing South Korea, speaking at the United Nations Security Council inquest into the attacks[10] |
The escape route, she said, was to be from Abu Dhabi via Amman to Rome, but the pair were diverted to Bahrain due to visa complications.[3] She added that she had been travelling undercover with Kim Sung Il for three years preparing for the attack.[5] Aged sixteen, Kim told investigators, she was chosen by the North Korean Communist Party, and trained in a number of languages.[5] Three years later, she was educated at a secret and elite espionage school run by the North Korean Army, where she was trained to kill with her hands and feet, and taught how to use rifles and grenades.[5] Training at the school involved enduring several years of gruelling physical and psychological conditioning. In 1987, aged 25, Kim was ordered to detonate a bomb aboard a South Korean jetliner, an attack that she was told would reunify her divided country forever.[5]
In January 1988, Kim announced at a press conference held by the Agency for National Security Planning, the South Korean secret services agency, that both she and her partner were North Korean operatives. She said that they had left a radio containing 350 grams of C-4 explosive and a liquor bottle containing approximately 700 ml of PLX explosive in an overhead rack in the passenger cabin of the aircraft. Kim expressed remorse at her actions and asked for the forgiveness of the families of those who had died. She also said that the order for the bombing had been "personally penned" by Kim Jong-il, the son of North Korean President Kim Il-sung, who had wanted to destabilize the South Korean government, disrupt upcoming elections and frighten teams from attending the Seoul Olympics in the same year.[11] "It is natural that I should be punished and killed a hundred times for my sin," she said.[4] Writing in The Washington Post on 15 January 1988, journalist Peter Maass stated that it was not clear to him if Kim was coerced in her remarks or was motivated by remorse for her actions.[12] Kim was subsequently sentenced to execution for the bombing of KAL 858, but she was later pardoned by the President of South Korea, Roh Tae-woo.[7] “The persons who ought to be on trial here are the leaders of North Korea," he said. "This child is as much a victim of this evil regime as the passengers aboard KAL 858.”[5]
The United States State Department specifically refers to the bombing of KAL 858 as a "terrorist act" and, until 2008, listed North Korea as a Designated State Sponsor of Terrorism[13] based on the results of the South Korean investigation. Charles E. Redman, Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs, said in January 1988 that the incident was an "act of mass murder," adding that the administration had "concluded that the evidence of North Korean culpability is compelling. We call on all nations to condemn North Korea for this terrorist action."[14] The action was discussed at length in at least two United Nations Security Council meetings where the allegations and evidence was aired by all sides,[15][16] but no resolution was passed.[17] North Korea continues to deny involvement in the attack on KAL 858, saying that the incident was a "fabrication" by South Korea and other countries.[5][7]
In 2001, right-wing activists and relatives of the victims killed in the attack demanded that Jong-il be arrested for terrorism offences when he visited Seoul later in the year.[18] Two petitions were filed against him, with the activists and relatives stating that there was strong evidence—namely Kim's testimony—to suggest he was ultimately responsible for the bombing. They also called for him to make a public apology for the incident and formally compensate the victims' families.[18] The leader of a right-wing South Korean group, lawyer Lee Chul-sung, said, "Kim Jong-il must be arrested and punished if he comes to Seoul without admitting his criminal acts and offering an apology and compensation."[18] Jong-il was not arrested, however.
“ | I am guilty of a heinous crime. How do I dare to think of marriage? ... Being a culprit I do have a sense of agony with which I must fight. In that sense I must still be a prisoner or a captive—of a sense of guilt. | ” |
—Kim Hyon Hui, asked about marriage[19] |
In 1993, William Morrow and Company published The Tears of My Soul, Kim's account of how she was trained as a North Korean espionage agent and carried out the bombing of KAL 858. In a gesture of contrition for her crime, she donated all of the proceeds from this book to the families of the victims of KAL 858.[20] The book details her early training and life in Macau, Hainan, and across Europe, carrying out the bombing, her consequent trial, reprieve, and integration into South Korea. In the book, Kim states that Kim Jong-il masterminded the bombing, and gave her the order to carry out the attack.[5] It is also believed that Jong-il masterminded the Rangoon bombing of 1983, in which North Korea attempted to assassinate then-South Korean President Chun Doo-hwan.[5] The book, which also details how North Korea was obsessed by its loss of South Korea,[5] has been translated into a number of languages.
In 2010, Kim visited Japan, where she met the families of Japanese people abducted by North Korea during the 1970s and 1980s who were forced to teach North Korean spies to disguise themselves as Japanese—some of whom, it was reported, may have trained Kim herself.[21] The Japanese government waived immigration rules in order for the visit to take place, since Kim is regarded as a criminal in the country for her use of the false passport. The Japanese press, however, criticized the visit, for which security was tight over fears that she might be attacked.[21] Kim arrived in the country on a private jet chartered by the Japanese government, and was ushered into a car shielded by large umbrellas. During the visit, she stayed in a holiday home owned by Yukio Hatoyama, then-Prime Minister of Japan.[21] Kim today resides in an undisclosed location and remains under constant protection for fear of reprisals, from either victims' families or the North Korean government, which has described her as a traitor to their cause.[5]
Tensions between North Korea and South Korea have not subsided since the signing of the armistice in 1953, and no fundamental peace treaty permanently ending the conflict has been signed.[22] In 2010, a South Korean Navy warship, the Cheonan, carrying 104 personnel, was sunk off the west coast of the country, near Baengnyeong Island in the Yellow Sea. 46 seamen were killed in the incident. A subsequent investigation by multiple countries, including South Korea, concluded that a North Korean torpedo, fired from a midget submarine, had sunk the ship.[23][24] North Korea denied any involvement in the attack, and threatened to spark a war if they were sanctioned for the attack.[25] The United Nations Security Council made a Presidential Statement condemning the attack but without identifying the attacker.[26]
In 2000, however, both countries held the first Inter-Korean Summit, in which the leaders of both countries signed a Joint Declaration, stating that they would hold a second summit in 2007. Furthermore, both countries were involved in militarily and ministerial discussions in Pyongyang, Seoul and Jeju Island of that year. On 2 October 2007, South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun walked across the Korean Demilitarized Zone in travelling to Pyongyang for talks with Kim Jong-il.[27] Both leaders reaffirmed the spirit of the 2000 Joint Declaration and had discussions on various issues related to realizing the advancement of South-North relations, peace on the Korean Peninsula, common prosperity of the Korean people and unification of Korea. On October 4, 2007, South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun and North Korean leader Kim Jong-il signed the peace declaration.[28] The document called for international talks to replace the armistice which ended the Korean War with a permanent peace treaty.[28]
External images | |
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JetPhotos.net photograph of HL7406 prior to the bombing | |
Image of Kim Hyon Hui, one of the two North Korean agents responsible for planting the bomb, in 2009 | |
Panasonic transistor radio c. 1987, likely similar to the model used to conceal the bomb |
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