South Korean singer Kim Jang-Hoon
(R) swims in the sea off Uljin, 225 kms southeast of Seoul, on August
13, 2012. He's among more than 40 swimmers who are part of a
politically-charged relay team swimming from South Korea to the
contested islands of Dokdo, or Takeshima as they're known in Japan.
A famous South Korean rock singer is just hours away from swimming into the diplomatic row over a small group of rocky islets in the East Sea, or the Sea of Japan.
Asian Defence News
A famous South Korean rock singer is just hours away from swimming into the diplomatic row over a small group of rocky islets in the East Sea, or the Sea of Japan.
Kim Jang-hoon is among
dozens of amateur athletes who left the eastern port of Uljin Monday,
bound for Dokdo, a largely uninhabited set of volcanic islands claimed
by both South Korea and Japan, known by Tokyo as Takeshima.
The group's 55-hour,
230-kilometer relay swim is expected to end Wednesday, on the 67th
anniversary of Korea's independence from Japanese colonial rule.
Before jumping into the
water, singer Kim Jang-Hoon told reporters: "I will never make such a
comment as 'Dokdo is our territory' when I arrive there. It's
meaningless to do so because they are undeniably our territory,"
according to the Yonhap news agency.
The politically-charged
event comes days after Lee Myung-Bank broke with convention to become
the first South Korean president to visit the contested islands.
Asian Defence News
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