Site icon

South Korea’s Lee Expresses Regret to North Korea Over Drone Incursion

SEOUL, April 6 (Reuters) – South Korean ⁠President ⁠Lee Jae Myung ⁠on Monday expressed regret to North Korea ​over a drone incursion that he said was carried ‌out by a South ‌Korean individual without government approval, stressing Seoul’s ⁠commitment ⁠to preventing future incidents.

“Although it was not our government’s ​intention, we express our regret to the North over the fact that unnecessary military tensions were caused by ​the irresponsible and reckless actions of some individuals,” Lee ⁠said ⁠in a cabinet meeting.

Lee ⁠said ​an investigation by South Korean authorities found a National ​Intelligence Service (NIS) employee ⁠and an active-duty military official were involved in the case, adding that the constitution forbade individual acts of provocation against North Korea.

Pyongyang said in ⁠January that drones sent from the South had violated its ⁠airspace, accusing Seoul of a serious provocation and saying it had shot them down.

South Korea denied any military involvement and launched a joint military-police probe, which led prosecutors to indict a South Korean man in his 30s on charges including violating aviation and national security ⁠laws over the unauthorised drone flights, according to authorities.

North Korea in recent months has declared South Korea as its most hostile state and rebuffed ​outreach efforts by Lee’s administration.

(Reporting by Kyu-seok ​ShimEditing by Ed Davies)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

Photos You Should See – April 2026

Exit mobile version