Sun.Star Cebu

KOREAS DISMANTLE WAR-ERA SPEAKERS

Frontline loudspeake­rs used to blare propaganda were dismantled while summit has yet to produce major breakthrou­gh

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The rival Koreas dismantled huge Cold War-era loudspeake­rs used to blare propaganda across their tense border on Tuesday, as South Korea’s president asked the United Nations to observe the North’s planned closing of its nuclear test site.

The dismantlin­g of dozens of loudspeake­rs was in line with an agreement on reconcilia­tion by the leaders of the Koreas at their historic summit last Friday. It is still unclear if such measures can bring permanent peace because no major breakthrou­gh in the North Korean nuclear standoff was produced at the summit.

South Korean soldiers disassembl­ed loudspeake­rs in multi- ple front-line areas in the presence of journalist­s before pulling them away from the border, the Defense Ministry said.

A South Korea military officer said later Tuesday that North Korea had also begun taking down its propaganda loudspeake­rs earlier in the day. He requested anonymity, citing department rules.

Both Koreas had turned off the propaganda broadcasts along the 248-kilometer (154mile) -long border last week before the summit.

They had restarted their propaganda warfare in early 2016 when tensions rose sharply after North Korea’s fourth nuclear test. South Korea broadcast K-pop songs as well as criticism of the North’s abysmal human rights conditions, world news and weather forecasts. The North broadcast anti-South messages and praises of its own political system.

North Korea is extremely sensitive to any outside criticism of its system, and most of its 24 million people are not allowed access to foreign TV and radio programs. In 2014, North Korean soldiers opened fire after South Korean activists sent anti-North leaflets over the border with large balloons, prompting South Korea to return fire. There were no reports of casualties.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has suspended nuclear and missile tests and placed his nuclear program up for negotiatio­n, but skepticism lingers about how serious his offer is and what disarmamen­t steps he would eventually take. Some experts say Kim’s sincerity will be tested during his planned meeting in several weeks with US President Donald Trump, in what would be the first North Korea-US summit talks since the end of the 1950-53 Korean War.

 ?? AP FOTO ?? GESTURES. South Korean soldiers dismantle loudspeake­rs near the demilitari­zed zone between the rival Koreas. They agreed in the summit to suspend propaganda and any hostile acts in the border.
AP FOTO GESTURES. South Korean soldiers dismantle loudspeake­rs near the demilitari­zed zone between the rival Koreas. They agreed in the summit to suspend propaganda and any hostile acts in the border.

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