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North Korea 'blows up joint liaison office' with South | North Korea 'blows up joint liaison office' with South |
(32 minutes later) | |
North Korea has blown up its joint liaison office with the South near the border town of Kaesong, South Korean officials say. | North Korea has blown up its joint liaison office with the South near the border town of Kaesong, South Korean officials say. |
The move comes just hours after the North renewed threats of military action against the South. | The move comes just hours after the North renewed threats of military action against the South. |
The site, which is in the North's territory, was opened in 2018 to help the two Koreas to communicate. | |
The liaison office has been empty since January due to Covid-19 restrictions. | |
Tensions between North and South Korea have been escalating for weeks, prompted by defector groups in the south sending propaganda into the north. | |
The North Korean leader's sister, Kim Yo-jong, threatened to demolish the office in a "tragic scene" in a statement at the weekend. | The North Korean leader's sister, Kim Yo-jong, threatened to demolish the office in a "tragic scene" in a statement at the weekend. |
South Korea's Unification Ministry in Seoul confirmed that at 2:49pm local time there was an explosion at the liaison office. | |
In recent weeks, North Korea has repeatedly condemned the South for allowing propaganda across the border. | |
Defector groups regularly send balloons with leaflets and other items, including USB sticks, into the north. | |
Last week Pyongyang announced it was severing all official communication links with Seoul. | |
The two states set up the office in Kaesong after talks between North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and his counterpart from the South, President Moon-Jae-in. | |
"North Korea's violent destruction of the liaison office at Kaesong is a symbolic blow to inter-Korean reconciliation and co-operation," said Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at Ewha University in Seoul. | |
"It's hard to see how such behaviour will help the Kim regime get what it wants from the world, but clearly such images will be used for domestic propaganda." | |
Analysts say Pyongyang may be seeking to create a crisis to increase its leverage as nuclear negotiations with the US are at a standstill. | |
North and South Korea are technically still at war because no peace agreement was reached when the Korean War ended in 1953. |