
The South Korean village of Nogok was shelled after two fighter jets misfired during a drill. The village is in the town of Pocheon, near the border with North Korea. Photo: Yonhap, via Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Fifteen people were injured in South Korea on Thursday after bombs dropped by fighter jets landed in a civilian district, damaging houses and a church during military exercises in Pocheon, the Air Force and the fire agency said.
The fire agency said in a statement that 15 people were wounded, including two who were seriously hurt.
Pocheon is about 40 kilometres (25 miles) northeast of Seoul, near the heavily militarized border with North Korea.
South Korea's Air Force said eight 500-pound (225kg) Mk82 bombs from two KF-16 jets fell outside the shooting range during joint live-fire exercises.
"We are sorry for the damage caused by the abnormal drop accident, and we wish the injured a speedy recovery," the Air Force said in a statement.
The accident was due to a pilot entering incorrect coordinates, said a military official who declined to be identified because of the sensitivity of the matter. The official said that the two jets then dropped four bombs each, with all of them detonating.
Authorities would suspend live-fire exercises until there was a clear understanding of what went wrong, but the incident would not affect major joint South Korean and U.S. military exercises due to begin on Monday, the official said.
Residents in the area have protested about the disturbance and potential danger from nearby training grounds for years.
Photographs from the scene showed a house hollowed out by the impact, shattered windows and a church building strewn with debris.
Security camera footage aired on local TV also caught the moments before and up to the incident, with a pickup truck driving on a tree-lined street before the area was consumed by a large explosion.
"The unthinkable has happened," said Pocheon City Mayor Baeck Young-Hyun, who urged the government and military to come up with measures to prevent any further civilian damage.
The defence ministry said earlier on Thursday that South Korea and U.S. forces were holding their first joint live-fire exercises in Pocheon, linked to annual military drills due to start next week.
Source: Reuters
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