North Korea to send 'leaflets of punishment' over border as tensions with South rise
North
Korea is gearing up to send propaganda leaflets over its southern border,
denouncing North Korean defectors and South Korea, its state media said on
Saturday, the latest retaliation for leaflets from the South as bilateral
tensions rise.
The
North’s Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported: “The enraged people across
the country are actively pushing forward with the preparations for launching a
large-scale distribution of leaflets to pour the leaflets of punishment upon
those in South Korea who are bereft of even elementary morality.”
The
leaflets are piled as high as a mountain, said the state news agency.
“Every action should be met with proper reaction and only
when one experiences it oneself, one can feel how offending it is,” KCNA said.
North
Korea has blamed North Korean defectors for launching leaflets across the border
and threatened military action. On Tuesday, Pyongyang blew up an inter-Korean
liaison office to show its displeasure against the defectors and South Korea
for not stopping them launching leaflets.
A
North Korean defector-led group said on Friday it had scrapped a plan to send
hundreds of plastic bottles stuffed with rice, medicine and face masks to North
Korea by throwing them into the sea near the border on Sunday.
The
two Koreas, which are still technically at war because their 1950-53 conflict
ended without a peace treaty, have waged leaflet campaigns for decades.
South
Korea’s military used to launch anti-North flyers across the demilitarised
zone, but the program ended in 2010.
Several
defector-led groups have regularly sent back flyers, together with food, $1
bills, mini radios and USB sticks containing South Korean dramas and news,
usually by balloon over the border or in bottles by river.
Pyongyang has used balloons to send its anti-South leaflets. South Koreans previously were rewarded with stationery if they reported leaflets from the North.




