Manila Standard

North Korea sends troops to rebuild border posts

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SEOUL—North Korea has sent troops to its southern border to restore guard posts taken down under a 2018 agreement with South Korea, Seoul’s military said Monday, after Pyongyang’s launch of a spy satellite stoked tensions on the peninsula.

In response to the launch last week, Seoul partially suspended the agreement that was aimed at easing border hostilitie­s, prompting Pyongyang to scrap the pact entirely and warn it would “never be bound” by the deal again.

A South Korean military official told AFP on Monday that Pyongyang had recently sent armed personnel and equipment to restore the guard posts.

Yonhap news agency reported that North Korean soldiers were “seen rebuilding the guard posts from Friday”, according to a military official, and that all 11 posts withdrawn under the fiveyear-old deal were expected to be restored.

One photo released by South Korea’s military shows four North Korean soldiers rebuilding a wooden guard post in the Demilitari­zed Zone that separates the two countries.

North Korea’s accelerate­d developmen­t of its weapons programmes has alarmed Seoul.

South Korea deployed “surveillan­ce and reconnaiss­ance assets” to the border after the satellite launch, in what its military said was an “essential measure” to defend against North Korea’s growing threats.

In response, Pyongyang said it would “deploy more powerful armed forces and new-type military hardware in the region along the Military Demarcatio­n Line” between the two Koreas.

Nuclear-armed North Korea is barred by successive rounds of UN resolution­s from tests using ballistic technology, and analysts say there is significan­t technologi­cal overlap between space launch capabiliti­es and the developmen­t of ballistic missiles.

Last week’s launch of the “Malligyong-1” was Pyongyang’s third attempt at securing a military eye in the sky after two failures in May and August.

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