You are here
North Korea blows up inter-Korean liaison office near border with South
By AFP - Jun 16,2020 - Last updated at Jun 16,2020
South Korean marines patrol along a military fence on the South Korea-controlled island of Yeonpyeong near the 'northern limit line' sea boundary with North Korea on Monday (AFP photo)
SEOUL — North Korea blew up an inter-Korean liaison office on its side of the border on Tuesday, after days of increasingly virulent rhetoric from Pyongyang.
The demolition came after Kim Yo Jong — the powerful sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un — said at the weekend the "useless north-south joint liaison office" would soon be seen "completely collapsed".
Footage of the explosion released by Seoul's presidential Blue House showed a blast rolling across several buildings just across the border in Kaesong, with a nearby tower partially collapsing as clouds of smoke rose into the sky.
Analysts say Pyongyang may be seeking to manufacture a crisis to increase pressure on Seoul while nuclear negotiations with Washington are at a standstill.
After an emergency meeting, the National Security Council said it would "react strongly" if Pyongyang "continues to take steps that aggravate the situation".
"All responsibility for repercussions stemming from this action falls squarely on the North," it added.
The liaison office — in a dormant industrial zone where Southern companies once employed Northern workers — was opened in September 2018, days before the South's President Moon Jae-in flew to Pyongyang for his third summit with Kim.
Around 20 officials from each side were stationed at the office during subsequent months.
But inter-Korean relations soured following the collapse of the Hanoi summit between Kim and US President Donald Trump in February last year over sanctions relief and what the North would be willing to give up in return.
Operations at the office were suspended in January because of the coronavirus pandemic.
Since early June, North Korea has issued a series of vitriolic condemnations of the South over activists sending anti-Pyongyang leaflets over the border — something defectors do on a regular basis.
Last week, Pyongyang announced it was severing all official communication links with Seoul.
"North Korea has started a provocation cycle with stages of escalation", said Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at Ewha University in Seoul, calling the destruction of the office "a symbolic blow to inter-Korean reconciliation and cooperation".
"The Kim regime is also signalling the United States won't have the luxury of keeping North Korea on the back-burner for the remainder of the year," he added.
Relations soured
Since Pyongyang condemned the leaflet launches — usually attached to hot air balloons or floated in bottles — the Unification ministry has filed a police complaint against two defector groups and warned of a "thorough crackdown" against activists.
On Monday, the left-leaning Moon urged the North not to "close the window of dialogue".
The two Koreas remain technically at war after Korean War hostilities ended with an armistice in 1953 that was never replaced with a peace treaty.
Last week the North criticised Trump in a stinging denunciation of the US on the second anniversary of the Singapore summit, with its foreign minister Ri Son Gwon accusing Washington of seeking regime change.
US diplomats insist that they believe Kim promised in Singapore to give up his nuclear arsenal, something Pyongyang has taken no steps to do.
The North is under multiple international sanctions over its banned weapons programmes.
It believes it deserves to be rewarded for its moratorium on nuclear and intercontinental ballistic missile tests and the disabling of its atomic test site, along with the return of jailed US citizens and remains of soldiers killed in the Korean War.
Related Articles
SEOUL — North Korea on Saturday sent a new round of trash-laden-balloons towards the South, Seoul’s military said, after anti-Pyongyang acti
SEOUL — A high-level South Korean delegation met with Kim Jong-un in Pyongyang on Wednesday, as Seoul plans a new summit with the North Kore
SEOUL — North and South Korea agreed on Monday to hold a summit in Pyongyang in September, another step towards boosting cooperation between