between North and South Korea in the
West Sea:
A: United Nations-created Northern Limit Line, 1953
B: North Korea-declared "Inter-Korean MDL", 1999 The locations of specific islands are reflected in the configuration of each maritime boundary, including ---- 4.
Jung-gu (Incheon Intl. Airport); 5.
Seoul; 6.
Incheon; 7.
Haeju; 8.
Kaesong; 9.
Ganghwa County; 10. Bukdo Myeon; 11.
Deokjeokdo; 12. Jawol Myeon; 13. Yeongheung Myeon Yeonpyeong lies near the
Northern Limit Line (NLL) and is only from the North Korean coastline. The 1953
Armistice Agreement which ended the
Korean War specified that five island groups, including Yeonpyeong, would remain under South Korean control. North Korea subsequently respected the
UN-acknowledged western maritime border for many years until around the mid-1990s. However, since the 1990s, North Korea has disputed the NLL. The North Korean government claims a border farther south that encompasses valuable fishing grounds (though it skirts around South Korean-held islands such as Yeonpyeong). The claim, nonetheless, is not accepted internationally, because: • DPRK's claim is neither based on
International law nor
Law of the Sea. • The United Nations Command insisted that the NLL must be maintained until a new maritime MDL could be established through the
United Nations Command Military Armistice Commission on the armistice agreement, and the DPRK claim was not established through the UNCMAC. ==2010 bombardment==