Millennium Post

NORTH KOREA CUTS OFF ALL COMMUNICAT­ION WITH SOUTH

North Korea said Tuesday's move was a response to South Korea's failure to STOP ACTIVISTS FROM FLOATING ANTI-PYONGYANG LEAFLETS ACROSS THEIR BORDER

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SEOUL: North Korea said it was cutting off all communicat­ion channels with South Korea on Tuesday, a move experts say could signal Pyongyang has grown frustrated that Seoul has failed to revive lucrative interkorea­n economic projects and persuade the United States to ease sanctions.

The North's Korean Central News Agency said all crossborde­r communicat­ion lines would be cut off at noon in the the first step of the determinat­ion to completely shut down all contact means with South Korea and get rid of unnecessar­y things.

When South Korean officials tried to contact their North Korean counterpar­ts via several channels after the North's announceme­nt Tuesday, the North Koreans didn't answer, according to the South Korean government.

North Korea has cut communicat­ions in the past not replying to South Korean phone calls or faxes and then restored those channels when tensions eased. North Korea has been accused at times of deliberate­ly creating tensions to bolster internal unity or to signal its frustratio­n over a lack of progress in nuclear talks with Washington.

In its announceme­nt, North Korea said Tuesday's move was a response to South Korea's failure to stop activists from floating anti-pyongyang leaflets across their border.

The South Korean authoritie­s connived at the hostile acts against (North Korea) by the riff-raff, while trying to dodge heavy responsibi­lity with nasty excuses, KCNA said.

South Korea's liberal government, which seeks improved relations with North Korea, said that cross-border hotlines must be maintained as they are the basic means of communicat­ion between the two Koreas.

The Unificatio­n Ministry said South Korea will strive to promote peace while abiding by inter-korean agreements.

For years, conservati­ve South Korean activists, including North Korean defectors living in the South, have floated huge balloons into North Korea carrying leaflets criticizin­g leader Kim Jong Un over his nuclear ambitions and human rights record.

The leafleting has sometimes triggered a furious response from North Korea, which bristles at any attempt to undermine its leadership.

South Korea has typically

let activists launch such bal

loons, citing their rights to freedom of speech, but has halted some attempts when North Korean warnings appeared to be serious. In 2014, North Korean troops opened fire at propaganda balloons flying toward their territory, triggering an exchange of fire that caused no known causalitie­s.

North Korea began taking with issu,e with the leafleting again last week.

Kim's sister Kim Yo Jong called defectors involved in recent leafleting human scum and mongrel dogs, and she threatened to permanentl­y shut down a liaison office and a jointly run factory park, both in the North, as well as nullify a 2018 inter-korean military agreement that had aimed to reduce tensions.

North Korea's latest moves will further set back South Korean President Moon Jaein's push for inter-korean reconcilia­tion.

The North Koreans have been trying to find something they can use to express their dissatisfa­ction and distrust against South Korea. And they've now got the leaftletin­g issue, so I don't think we can simply resolve (tensions) even if we address issues related to the leafleting, said Kim Dongyub, an analyst from Seoul's Institute for Far Eastern Studies.

He said the North Korean statement also appeared aimed at strengthen­ing internal unity and signaling the North's resolve not to make concession­s in nuclear talks.

Moon, who met Kim Jong Un three times in 2018, facilitate­d a flurry of high-profile meetings between Pyongyang and Washington, including the first summit between Kim and President Donald Trump in June 2018. But North Korea has increasing­ly turned the cold shoulder to Moon and suspended virtually all interkorea­n cooperatio­n since a second Kim-trump summit in early 2019 fell apart due to disputes over U.s.-led sanctions.

North Korea has urged Moon's government not to meddle in its diplomacy with Trump and slammed Seoul for failing to break away from Washington and revive joint economic projects held up by the sanctions.

Critics of Moon's engagement policy say North Korea had initially expected Moon to help it win sanctions relief but eventually got angry with him after Kim returned from the second Trump summit empty handed. How far Kim is willing to go in stoking tensions is unclear. Some experts say he could take additional steps targeting South Korea, such as shutting down the liaison office or short-range weapons tests.

However, they say Kim may be reluctant to do something like stage a nuclear or missile test due to concerns it could completely scuttle diplomacy with Washington.

Some see Tuesday's move as a sign that North Korea is feeling the pinch financiall­y and that its already battered economy perhaps deteriorat­ed further when the Coronaviru­s pandemic forced it to shut its border with China, the North's biggest trading partner.

North Korea said the decision to sever communicat­ions was made by Kim's sister and former hard-line military intelligen­ce chief Kim Yong Chol.

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