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Seoul: A South Korean navy warship that sank in March was torpedoed by a North Korean submarine near the country's maritime border, a multi-national team of investigators said on Thursday.
The group of civilian and military experts said the 1,200-tonne warship Cheonan sunk as a result of an "external underwater explosion" caused by a torpedo fired by a North Korean submarine, resulting in one of the worst peacetime casualties in the country's naval history.
"The evidence points overwhelmingly to the conclusion that the torpedo was fired by a North Korean submarine. There is no other plausible explanation," Xinhua quoted the group as saying in a statement.
North Korea has denied its involvement in the incident that occurred March 26 near the disputed Yellow Sea border. Forty-six crew members lost their lives.
North Korea's Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea on Wednesday released a statement accusing South Korea of taking advantage of the sinking of its warship to push north-south relations to a catastrophe.
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