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U.S. apologizes for wrong anthrax shipment to S. Korea

All News 19:45 May 30, 2015

By Oh Seok-min

SINGAPORE, May 30 (Yonhap) -- U.S. Defense Secretary Ashton Carter apologized Saturday for the wrongful shipment of a live anthrax sample to a U.S. military base in South Korea, vowing to take proper actions to prevent a recurrence, Seoul's defense ministry said.

The issue was part of wide-ranging topics between Carter and his South Korean counterpart, Han Min-koo, when they met in Singapore on the sidelines of an annual Asia security summit known as the Shangri-La Dialogue, ministry officials said.

According to the Pentagon, a U.S. military laboratory in Utah sent samples of live anthrax spores to the Osan Air Base in Pyeongtaek, just south of Seoul, as well as military and commercial laboratories in nine U.S. states by accident. The deadly biological agent was supposed to be killed before being distributed for research.

In the U.S. military base in South Korea, some 22 civilian and military personnel "may have been exposed (to the bacteria)," but "none of the personnel have shown any signs ... and there is no risk to the public," the U.S. military had said in an earlier announcement, adding the sample was destroyed and the sanitization process was completed.

"Carter extended his apology to South Korean Defense Minister Han Min-koo for the incident and vowed to take appropriate measures to prevent a recurrence," a South Korean defense ministry official told reporters.

Noting that an investigation into the case was under way, Carter pledged "to share the results in a swift manner with South Korea," the official said.

The South Korean official quoted Carter as telling Han that those involved in the inadvertent delivery of the deadly agent would be held responsible.

The sample, supposed to be an inert bacteria, was for a training, which was meant to "defend the Korean people by testing currently fielded equipment and new systems that could better identify toxins and pathogens in the environment," according to an earlier announcement by the U.S. Defense Department.

The lethal disease by the bacterium Bacillus anthracis can be transmitted through contact or consumption of infected meat, though it is not contagious, according to experts.

graceoh@yna.co.kr
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