Travel bans imposed on suspects in South Korea–North Korea drone probe

In the latest development of the probe into alleged drone flights into North Korea, a joint police and military team imposed travel bans on January 23 on three civilian suspects, following raids earlier in the week. The action targets the same individuals linked to incursions claimed by Pyongyang in September 2025 and January 4, 2026, amid South Korea's denial of military involvement.

The travel bans were placed on the three suspects—a graduate student surnamed Oh who claimed responsibility for the flights, an individual surnamed Jang suspected of building the drones, and a third linked to their drone manufacturing company—sources said on Friday.

This escalates the joint investigation launched last week after North Korea accused South Korea of sovereignty violations via drone incursions. South Korea's military maintains it does not operate the drone models shown by Pyongyang. One drone reportedly photographed a South Korean Marine Corps base after launching from Ganghwa County near Seoul.

Investigators aim to charge the suspects under the Aviation Safety Act and Protection of Military Bases and Installations Act. The probe intensified after Oh's media interview claiming the flights matched Pyongyang's dates. It has since expanded with revelations of the suspects' prior work at former President Yoon Suk Yeol's presidential office and allegations tying Oh to online news outlets connected to a military intelligence official.

The Defense Intelligence Command confirmed the outlets issued fake IDs for agents but has not linked officials to the drone activities, per a briefing to Rep. Boo Seung-chan. This adds layers to inter-Korean tensions and domestic security scrutiny.

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South Korean authorities raiding a suspect's home amid North Korea drone incursion investigation.
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Raids conducted on three suspects in South Korea-North Korea drone incursion probe

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South Korean police and military investigators raided the homes and offices of three civilian suspects accused of drone flights into North Korea, escalating the probe sparked by a graduate student's public claim last week. The action targets individuals linked to sovereignty violation claims by Pyongyang in late 2025 and early 2026.

A South Korean graduate student publicly claimed responsibility for drone flights into North Korea, which Pyongyang accused of sovereignty violations in September 2025 and January 2026. He says his acquaintance, now under joint military-police investigation, conducted the flights to monitor pollution at a uranium facility. President Lee Jae-myung has ordered a thorough probe amid heightened peninsula tensions.

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South Korea's Defense Minister Ahn Gyu-back on Saturday dismissed North Korea's accusations of drone incursions into its territory, stating the alleged drones do not match South Korean military models and proposing a joint investigation. This follows Pyongyang's warnings of retaliation over the claimed violations on January 4 and September 27, 2025.

North Korea fired multiple short-range ballistic missiles toward the East Sea on January 4, 2026—its first weapons test of the year—claiming retaliation for South Korean drone incursions near Pyongyang. The U.S. reaffirmed defense commitments to allies, while the launches preceded South Korean President Lee Jae-myung's summit with China's Xi Jinping, where leaders pledged to pursue North Korea dialogue.

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South Korea's military sent propaganda leaflets to North Korea at least 23 times last year under the Yoon Suk Yeol administration, a lawmaker said. The operations followed a National Security Council decision in October 2023 to resume them, shortly after the Constitutional Court ruled a ban unconstitutional. The information comes from a defense ministry probe disclosed by Rep. Choo Mi-ae's office.

A group of 73 South Koreans detained in Cambodia over alleged online scam operations returned home on January 23 to face investigations. They are accused of swindling 48.6 billion won from 869 South Korean victims, marking the nation's largest repatriation of criminal suspects from a single country.

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Seventy-three South Korean nationals detained in Cambodia over alleged scam crimes will be forcibly returned home for investigation. Cheong Wa Dae announced on Thursday that a chartered flight carrying them will depart from Incheon International Airport. They are accused of swindling 486.7 billion won from 869 South Korean victims.

 

 

 

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