Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Possible N. Korea rocket parts

- On the Web North Korea’s nuclear program nwadg.com/ northkorea Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Ahn Young-joon, Hyung-jin Kim, Youkyung Lee, Foster Klug and Kim Tong-hyung of The Associated Press and by Choe Sang-hun of The New York Times.

Objects that are believed to be part of a North Korean rocket are displayed for the South Korean media Thursday on a South Korean navy ship at the Second Fleet Command of Navy in Pyeongtaek, South Korea. North Korea on Thursday vowed to immediatel­y deport all South Korean nationals and freeze all South Korean assets at a jointly run factory park in the North, a swift, aggressive response to the South Korean decision to suspend operations at the former symbol of inter-Korean cooperatio­n.

PAJU, South Korea — North Korea on Thursday ordered a military takeover of a factory park that had been the last major symbol of cooperatio­n with South Korea, calling Seoul’s suspension of operations at the jointly run facility a “dangerous declaratio­n of war.”

North Korea said it was responding to Seoul’s shutdown order by immediatel­y deporting the hundreds of South Koreans who work at the complex just across from the world’s most heavily armed border in the city of Kaesong.

The North also was pulling out the tens of thousands of North Korean employees, freezing all South Korean assets tied to the city and shutting down two crucial cross-border communicat­ion hotlines.

South Korea’s action was “a declaratio­n of an end to the last lifeline of the North-South relations” and “driving the situation in the Korean Peninsula to the brink of a war,” said a statement from the Committee for the Peaceful Reunificat­ion of Korea, a North Korean government agency in charge of relations with the South.

“The South Korean puppet group will experience what disastrous and painful consequenc­es will be entailed by its action,” it said, calling the South Korean president, Park Geun-hye, “a traitor for all ages.”

Hours after a deadline set by North Korea passed, South Korea’s government said all of the 280 South Korean workers who had been at the facility had returned to the South.

Tensions have risen since North Korea claimed a successful nuclear test last month, followed by a long-range rocket launch on Sunday that internatio­nal observers see as a banned test of ballistic-missile technology. South Korea responded Thursday by beginning work to suspend operations at the factory park, one of its harshest possible punishment options.

“I was told not to bring anything but personal goods, so I’ve got nothing but my clothes to take back,” a manager at a South Korean apparel company at the complex, who declined to give his name, said by phone before he crossed to the South.

Chang Beom Kang, who has been running an apparel company in Kaesong since 2009, said from South Korea that his company has about 920 North Korean workers — who didn’t show up on Thursday — and seven South Korean managers at Kaesong.

He said one of his workers, who entered Kaesong earlier Thursday, was about to cross the border to return to South Korea with thousands of women’s clothes produced at the factory. But at the last minute the employee had to drive back to the factory to unload the clothes because of North Korea’s announceme­nt that it would freeze all South Korean assets there.

“I’m devastated now,” Kang said by phone, saying he’s worried about losing credibilit­y with clients because of the crisis.

Yonhap news agency, citing an unidentifi­ed military official, reported that South Korea bolstered its military readiness and strength along the western portion of the border in the event of a North Korean provocatio­n. The report didn’t elaborate on what that meant. Seoul’s Defense Ministry would only say that its military has been on high alert since the North’s nuclear test last month.

Seoul said its decision on Kaesong was an effort to stop North Korea from using hard currency earned from the park to pay for its nuclear and missile programs.

A group of people braved the rain for hours on the southern side of a cross-border bridge on Thursday anxiously waiting for their family members and co-workers to return to South Korea.

“I don’t think I want my husband to ever work in Kaesong again,” commented a woman who declined to give her name but said her husband was a manager at Taesung, a maker of cosmetics products.

“Whenever the North does something provocativ­e, we worry about our loved ones,” she said.

Kim Nam-sik, who heads South Korea’s management body for the Kaesong park, told reporters at the bridge that the homecoming process was complete at 11:05 p.m., more than five hours after the North’s deadline. The Unificatio­n Ministry said South Korea cut off its supply of electricit­y to the park as of 11:53 p.m.

Kim said it took longer for the South Koreans to withdraw because many were forced to leave manufactur­ing materials and other important items they initially planned to bring back.

The factory park, which started producing goods in 2004, has provided $560 million in cash to North Korea, South Korean Unificatio­n Minister Hong Yong-pyo said.

South Korean businesses with factories at the park reacted with a mixture of disappoint­ment and anger. In a statement, the associatio­n of South Korean companies at Kaesong denounced Seoul’s decision as “entirely incomprehe­nsible and unjust.”

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AP/Yonhap/HONG KI-WON
 ?? AP/AHN YOUNG-JOON ?? A South Korean cargo truck returning from North Korea’s joint Kaesong Industrial Complex passes the customs, immigratio­n and quarantine office Thursday near the border village of Panmunjom in Paju, South Korea.
AP/AHN YOUNG-JOON A South Korean cargo truck returning from North Korea’s joint Kaesong Industrial Complex passes the customs, immigratio­n and quarantine office Thursday near the border village of Panmunjom in Paju, South Korea.
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