The Independent

North Korea to fire leaflet propaganda across border

- JOE SOMMERLAD

Kim Jong-un loyalists are preparing to bombard neighbouri­ng South Korea with propaganda leaflets, North Korea’s state news agency has said, amid ongoing tensions between the two countries.

The North’s Korean Central News Agency said yesterday that citizens “are actively pushing forward with the preparatio­ns for launching a large-scale distributi­on of leaflets” across the border. The flyers set to be blasted towards Seoul are currently in a stockpile that stands as tall as a mountain, the official broadcaste­r claimed, adding: “Every action should be met with proper reaction and only when one experience­s it oneself, one can feel how offending it is.”

South Korea has likewise been firing leaflets northwards in recent days in an effort to debunk claims by Pyongyang, an action that North Korea blamed on disgruntle­d defectors as it threatened to launch military action against its neighbour.

On Tuesday, Mr Kim’s regime blew up an inter-Korean liaison office to express its displeasur­e over the defectors’ leaflet campaign and at South Korea for not stopping them, calling the country “a mongrel dog”.

South Korea’s unificatio­n ministry, which is responsibl­e for inter-Korean dialogue, said on Saturday that North Korea’s planned leaflet onslaught was “extremely regrettabl­e” and urged it to cast aside the idea immediatel­y.

One group of North Korean defectors said on Friday that they had scrapped a plan to throw hundreds of plastic bottles stuffed with rice, medicine and face masks into the sea near the border over the weekend in the hope that they would wash up on North Korea’s beaches and relieve local demand. Other defector organisati­ons have previously dispatched packages of food, dollar bills, mini-radios and even USB sticks containing South Korean TV dramas and news broadcasts, usually delivered by balloon or in bottles ferried by river.

The two countries are still technicall­y at war because the 1950-53 armed conflict between them concluded without a peace treaty being signed. They have waged informatio­n campaigns against each other for decades, although an official South Korean programme dropping leaflets across the demilitari­sed zone ended in 2010.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? Military personnel mark a political anniversar­y in Pyongyang
(Reuters) Military personnel mark a political anniversar­y in Pyongyang

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