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Number of people injured after fighter jets accidentally drop bombs rises to 29, South Korea says

SEOUL, South Korea — The number of people injured when South Korean fighter jets accidentally dropped bombs on a civilian area has increased to 29 from 15, the National Defense Ministry said Friday.

Those injured include 15 civilians and 14 military personnel, the ministry said. Seven civilians and two soldiers remain hospitalized, including two civilians classified as seriously injured, while 20 other people have been treated and discharged, it said.

The accident occurred Thursday during military training in Pocheon, a northeastern city of about 140,000 people near the heavily fortified border with North Korea. U.S. and South Korean forces were conducting a live-fire drill in preparation for Freedom Shield, an annual U.S.-South Korea joint military exercise that is set to get underway Monday.

South Korea's Air Force said on March 6, that one of its fighter jets had accidentally dropped eight bombs in the wrong place during a training exercise, resulting in civilians being injured.

A South Korean soldier near the site of the incident in Pocheon on Thursday.Yonhap / AFP – Getty Images

A total of eight 500-pound MK-82 bombs were “abnormally released” by two South Korean air force KF-16s, landing outside the designated firing range.

While the Freedom Shield exercise is going ahead as planned, Col. Ryan Donald, spokesperson for U.S. Forces Korea (USFK), said Friday that the U.S. and South Korean militaries had agreed to pause all live-fire training until further notice.

USFK said earlier that no U.S. Air Force aircraft participated in the exercise.

Two South Korean Air Force fighter jets accidentally dropped eight bombs on a village during a joint training exercise with US forces on March 6, 2025, officials said, with civilians among 15 people injured.

A 2015 photo shows South Korean KF-16 fighter jets dropping bombs on a mountain target in Pocheon, South Korea.Jung Yeon-Je / AFP – Getty Images file

South Korea, a U.S. treaty ally, hosts almost 30,000 U.S. service members. The Freedom Shield exercise, which runs for 10 days from March 10, is designed to strengthen the alliance’s combined defense posture in the face of growing threats from nuclear-armed North Korea.

North Korea criticized the Freedom Shield exercise Friday, saying it would worsen the situation on the Korean Peninsula and violate its “sovereignty, security and interests.”

“If the U.S. continues to renew its record of military muscle-flexing, we will have no option but to renew our record of displaying strategic deterrent,” the state-run KCNA news agency said in a commentary.

Stella Kim reported from Seoul, and Julia Zhong reported from Hong Kong.

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