New Straits Times

NORTH, SOUTH KOREA TRADE FIRE

Incident comes after reports of Kim’s 1st public appearance in 3 weeks

-

NORTH Korean troops fired multiple gunshots towards the South in the DMZ dividing the peninsula yesterday, prompting South Korean forces to fire back, Seoul said.

The rare exchange of gunfire comes a day after North Korean state media reported that leader Kim Jong-un had made his first public appearance in nearly three weeks following an absence that triggered intense speculatio­n about his health and fears about the stability of the nation.

A South Korean guard post was hit by several shots from the North, the joint chiefs of staff (JCS) in Seoul said in a statement, adding that no casualties were reported in the South.

“Our military responded with two rounds of gunfire and a warning announceme­nt,” the JCS said.

The South Korean military later said the North Korean gunshots were “not deemed intentiona­l”, according to the Yonhap news agency.

The last time the two sides exchanged fire on the border was in 2014, with North Korean soldiers also shooting at a defector in 2017 but the South did not fire back.

Easing military tensions on their border was one of the agreements reached between Kim and South Korean President Moon Jae-in at a summit in Pyongyang in 2018.

But most of the deals have not been acted on by North Korea, with Pyongyang largely cutting off contact with Seoul.

North Korea’s discussion­s with the United States over Pyongyang’s nuclear arsenal are also at a standstill, despite three meetings between Kim and US President Donald Trump.

The uncertaint­y around the process would have increased had Kim been incapacita­ted or dead as rumoured recently.

Speculatio­n about Kim’s health has been swirling since his conspicuou­s no-show at April 15 celebratio­ns for the birthday of his grandfathe­r, the North’s founder — the most important day in the country’s political calendar.

His absence triggered unconfirme­d reports over his condition, while the US and South Korea insisted they had no informatio­n to believe any of the conjecture was true.

However, North Korean state television on Friday showed Kim walking, smiling broadly and smoking a cigarette at what it said was the opening of a fertiliser factory.

A senior South Korean presidenti­al official yesterday brushed off rumours that Kim had undergone surgery during his absence, saying they had enough grounds to believe he had not.

Trump on Saturday welcomed the leader’s return.

“I, for one, am glad to see he is back, and well!” he tweeted.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia