Shanghai Daily

DPRK blows up 10 front-line guard posts along the border

- (AP)

THE Democratic People’s Republic of Korea blew up some of its front-line guard posts yesterday as part of an agreement to ease tensions along its heavily fortified border with South Korea, Seoul’s Defense Ministry said.

In September, the Koreas’ militaries agreed at a leaders’ summit in Pyongyang to eventually dismantle all guard posts inside the 248-kilometer-long, 4km-wide border. They later withdrew weapons and troops from 11 of their guard posts and decided to completely dismantle 10 of them by the end of November.

Seoul’s Defense Ministry said it confirmed the dismantlin­g of 10 DPRK guard posts yesterday. It said DPRK soldiers had used hammers to tear down parts of the guard posts ahead of yesterday’s near-simultaneo­us demolition­s.

A ministry statement said the DPRK had informed South Korea of its plans in advance.

The ministry released photos showing parts of structures on what it said was the DPRK side of the central portion of the border, an explosion with black smoke at the site, and debris scattered around the area with no trace left of the structure.

South Korea began dismantlin­g 10 of its guard posts with dynamite and excavators last week. Ministry officials said they haven’t completed the dismantlin­g work yet.

Despite its name, the area around the Demilitari­zed Zone is one of the world’s most fortified places, replete with minefields and barbed-wire fences. It was originally created as a buffer at the end of the 1950-53 Korean War.

South Korea had about 60 posts inside the DMZ guarded by layers of barbed wire and manned by troops with machine guns. The DPRK was estimated to have 160 such front-line posts. Once the dismantlin­g is done, the two Koreas are to jointly verify their work by the end of December. They haven’t decided when they will dismantle the rest of the guard posts.

Under the September agreements, the Koreas have also taken steps to disarm the shared border village of Panmunjom, halted live-fire drills along the border and have been removing mines at a front-line area to conduct their first joint searches for Korean War dead.

Relations between the Koreas have improved since DPRK leader Kim Jong Un reached out to South Korea and the United States early this year with a promise to achieve the denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula.

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