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SEOUL - A joint civilian and military investigation team in South Korea gave its initial findings that a "close-range external explosion" might be the cause of a Navy warship's sinking last month, Seoul's Yonhap News Agency on Sunday quoted government officials as saying.
The bow of the sunken South Korean naval vessel Cheonan is lifted by a giant crane off Baekryeongdo island, near the maritime border with North Korea, northwest of Seoul, South Korea, April 24, 2010. The body of a missing sailor was found in the bow of the sunken Navy warship Cheonan, which has been pulled out of water by the Navy and a civilian salvage team on Saturday, according to local media. [Xinhua] |
"An initial inspection of the bow of the Cheonan salvaged Saturday led investigators to reach a preliminary conclusion that the warship was destroyed by a non-contact external explosion," a ranking government official told Yonhap.
"Instead of being directly hit by a torpedo or other underwater weapon, the Cheonan was affected by a strong explosion that occurred below its bottom at a close range," the official was quoted as saying.
The bow of the sunken ship was salvaged on Saturday while the stern of it was raised out of water on April 15.
According to local media, the initial investigation conducted after the stern was salvaged showed that the propeller and keel appeared not to have been seriously damaged, however, there is a C- shaped cut in the right side of the stern, which indicates that the vessel "might have suffered a strong external shock".
Meanwhile, South Korean Prime Minister Chung Un-chan announced a five-day nationwide mourning period in tribute to the Cheonan victims from Sunday, during which the government will set up an altar at Seoul Plaza, the central of the capital city to allow citizens to offer their condolences. The government also decided to set April 29 as the national mourning day while hold a Navy funeral for the victims at the same day.