The Star Malaysia

Seoul holds war games

Live-fire military drills go on despite North Korean threat

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SEOUL: South Korea conducted livefire military drills from five islands near its disputed sea boundary with North Korea, despite Pyongyang’s threat to attack.

South Korea reported no immediate action by North Korea following yesterday’s drills, which ended after about two hours. They took place in an area of the Yellow Sea that was the target of a North Korean artillery attack in 2010 that killed four South Koreans and raised fears of a wider conflict.

The heightened tension comes two months after the death of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il. His young son Kim Jong-un has taken the helm of the nation of 24 million.

South Korean military officials said they were ready to repel any attack. Residents on the front-line islands were asked to go to undergroun­d shelters before the drills started, according to South Korea’s Defence Ministry and Joint Chiefs of Staff.

Before the drills began, North Korea said it would launch a “thousands-fold more severe” punishment than the 2010 shelling if South Korea conducted the drills.

North Korea is fully prepared for a “total war” and the drills will lead to a “complete collapse” of ties between the Koreas, the North’s Committee for the Peaceful Reunificat­ion of Korea said in a statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency.

Seoul is closely monitoring the reaction of North Korea. The Korean Peninsula has been technicall­y at war for about 60 years.

Officials from North Korea and the United States are to meet this week in Beijing for talks on the country’s nuclear weapons programme. The discussion­s will be the first such bilateral contact since Jong-il’s Dec 17 death.

Ties between the Koreas plummeted following the 2010 shelling of front-line Yeonpyeong Island and a deadly warship sinking blamed on Pyongyang.

North Korea has flatly denied its involvemen­t in the sinking, which killed 46 South Korean sailors. — AP

 ??  ?? War relics: Visitors admiring decommissi­oned weapons at the Korea War Memorial Museum in Seoul yesterday as South Korea started its military drills near its disputed sea boundary with North Korea. — EPA
War relics: Visitors admiring decommissi­oned weapons at the Korea War Memorial Museum in Seoul yesterday as South Korea started its military drills near its disputed sea boundary with North Korea. — EPA

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