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The main entrance of the General Association of Korean Residents in Japan, or Chongryon, in the Chiyoda Ward of Tokyo, after it was a hit by gunshots on Feb. 23. A police van can be seen behind the gate. (by Cho Ki-weon, Tokyo correspondent)
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Organization’s vice president blames attack on the hostile policy of the Japanese government
“It looks like a bullet struck the door and sent some splinters flying,” said Jo Son-o, as he stood in front of the main entrance to the headquarters of the North Korea-affiliated General Association of Korean Residents in Japan, or Chongryon for short, located in the Chiyoda Ward of Tokyo, on the afternoon of Feb. 23. Cho, the director of Chongryon’s bureau of international affairs and unification, was pointing to some marks on the ground near the main entrance. Around 3:50 am on Feb. 23, two men got out of a vehicle in front of the Chongryon headquarters and fired several rounds from a handgun at the building. No one was hurt, but there were some Chongryon executives in the building at the time. The men were arrested for property damage by police who were on the lookout nearby. They are residents of Yokohama, 46 and 56 years old, and one of them drove while the other fired the gun from the passenger’s seat. The driver was reportedly active with a right-wing organization until last year.
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Police gather outside the main entrance of the General Association of Korean Residents in Japan, or Chongryon, in the Chiyoda Ward of Tokyo, after it was a hit by gunshots on Feb. 23. (by Cho Ki-weon, Tokyo correspondent)
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