Times of Suriname

North Korea blows up liaison office in Kaesong used for talks with South

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SOUTH KOREA - North Korea has blown up a joint liaison office used for talks between itself and South Korea, the latest sign that ties between the two longtime adversarie­s are rapidly deteriorat­ing.

North Korean state media reported that the four-story building, which is located in the town of Kaesong on the North Korean side of the demilitari­zed zone that divides the two Koreas, was “completely destroyed” by a “terrific explosion”.

A plume of black smoke rising above the site was visible from the South Korean side of the border sortly after.

The liaison office had been closed since January 30 due to the novel coronaviru­s pandemic, according to the South Korean Unificatio­n Ministry. South Korean staff had not been to the building since, the ministry said.

But the destructio­n of a building meant to facilitate dialogue, paid for by South Korea and sitting on North

Korean soil, is highly symbolic. It may mark a turning point in relations between two countries that had committed themselves to “a new era of peace” fewer than three years ago.

North Korea framed its decision to destroy the liaison office as a retaliator­y measure after a group of defectors used balloons to send antiNorth Korean leaflets north of the DMZ.

“The recent foolish act of daring hurt the dignity of our supreme leadership,” a statement carried in KCNA yesterday read.

“The world will clearly see what severe punishment our people will mete out to the South Korean authoritie­s and how they wipe the human scum off the earth.”

North Korea claimed the leaflets violated the deal Kim Jong Un and South Korean President Moon Jae-in struck in 2018 at their first summit, when both leaders agreed to cease “all hostile acts and eliminatin­g their means, including broadcasti­ng through loudspeake­rs and distributi­on of leaflets” along their shared border. It’s illegal for average North Koreans to consume informatio­n that is not approved by the country’s powerful propaganda machine, and doing so can carry dire consequenc­es.

The liaison office was reopened and refurbishe­d as part of that deal to help the two Koreas communicat­e, but its future had been thrown into doubt last week when North Korea announced it was cutting off all communicat­ion with South Korea, including a hotline meant to directly connect the leaders of the two countries, in response to the leaflets. North Korean state media also announced Tuesday that the country’s armed forces would re-militarize portions of the Korean border that had been pacified by both sides in recent years. An official at South Korea’s Presidenti­al Blue House called the decision to blow up the liaison office “an act of betrayal of the expectatio­ns of all who wish for the improvemen­t of the interKorea­n relations and settlement of peace on the Korean Peninsula.” The South Korean Defense Ministry said it was monitoring North Korea’s armed forces and would “strongly” respond to any military provocatio­ns.

Kim Yo Jong, Kim Jong Un’s sister and perhaps the second most powerful person in the country, demanded the South Korean government punish the defectors, whom she called “betrayers,” “human scum” and “riffraff who dared hurt the absolute prestige of our Supreme Leader representi­ng our country and its great dignity,” according to a statement carried by North Korean state news agency KCNA on Saturday. Kim also hinted in that statement that the North Korean liaison office would be destroyed in some manner.

(CNN)

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