<p>North Korea on Sunday warned the South Korean navy to stop crossing into its territorial waters as ships search for the body of a Seoul official shot dead at sea by Pyongyang's soldiers.</p>.<p>State media said the North will begin its own search for the body and warned that the South's naval operations threatened to raise tensions.</p>.<p>The fisheries official was shot dead by North Korean soldiers on Tuesday -- the first killing of a South Korean civilian by Pyongyang's forces in a decade -- prompting a rare public apology from leader Kim Jong Un.</p>.<p>Seoul's military has accused the North Korean soldiers of pouring oil over the man's body and burning it after shooting him.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/south-korea-calls-for-north-korea-to-further-investigate-shooting-893249.html" target="_blank">South Korea calls for North Korea to further investigate shooting</a></strong></p>.<p>The death was an "awful case which should not have happened", the North's official KCNA news agency said Sunday, adding that Pyongyang was organising a search operation in its waters to help locate the body.</p>.<p>It said the country was considering "procedures and ways of handing over any tide-brought corpse to the south side ... in case we find it during the operation".</p>.<p>But it warned that South Korean vessels near the site of the incident had crossed into North Korean waters.</p>.<p>"We can never overlook any intrusion into our territorial waters and we seriously warn the south side against it," KCNA said.</p>.<p>"It arouses our due vigilance as it may lead to another awful incident."</p>.<p>South Korea on Saturday demanded the North carry out a further probe into the shooting and said it would request a joint investigation if necessary.</p>.<p>Apologies from North Korea are unusual and the message from Kim came with inter-Korean ties in a deep freeze and nuclear negotiations between Pyongyang and Washington deadlocked.</p>.<p>There have been no North Korean media reports on the contents of the letter from Kim.</p>
<p>North Korea on Sunday warned the South Korean navy to stop crossing into its territorial waters as ships search for the body of a Seoul official shot dead at sea by Pyongyang's soldiers.</p>.<p>State media said the North will begin its own search for the body and warned that the South's naval operations threatened to raise tensions.</p>.<p>The fisheries official was shot dead by North Korean soldiers on Tuesday -- the first killing of a South Korean civilian by Pyongyang's forces in a decade -- prompting a rare public apology from leader Kim Jong Un.</p>.<p>Seoul's military has accused the North Korean soldiers of pouring oil over the man's body and burning it after shooting him.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/south-korea-calls-for-north-korea-to-further-investigate-shooting-893249.html" target="_blank">South Korea calls for North Korea to further investigate shooting</a></strong></p>.<p>The death was an "awful case which should not have happened", the North's official KCNA news agency said Sunday, adding that Pyongyang was organising a search operation in its waters to help locate the body.</p>.<p>It said the country was considering "procedures and ways of handing over any tide-brought corpse to the south side ... in case we find it during the operation".</p>.<p>But it warned that South Korean vessels near the site of the incident had crossed into North Korean waters.</p>.<p>"We can never overlook any intrusion into our territorial waters and we seriously warn the south side against it," KCNA said.</p>.<p>"It arouses our due vigilance as it may lead to another awful incident."</p>.<p>South Korea on Saturday demanded the North carry out a further probe into the shooting and said it would request a joint investigation if necessary.</p>.<p>Apologies from North Korea are unusual and the message from Kim came with inter-Korean ties in a deep freeze and nuclear negotiations between Pyongyang and Washington deadlocked.</p>.<p>There have been no North Korean media reports on the contents of the letter from Kim.</p>