S. Korea beefs up border propaganda broadcasts to North

S. Korea beefs up border propaganda broadcasts to North

February 11, 2016
Vehicles cross the Tongil bridge leading away from the Kaesong joint industrial area and the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) between the two Koreas, in Paju, on Wednesday. — AFP
Vehicles cross the Tongil bridge leading away from the Kaesong joint industrial area and the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) between the two Koreas, in Paju, on Wednesday. — AFP

SEOUL — South Korea’s military said on Wednesday it had stepped up border propaganda broadcasts targeting North Korean soldiers in protest at Pyongyang’s widely-condemned rocket launch.

The army since last month has blasted across the heavily-fortified border a mix of news, propaganda messages and K-pop music using giant banks of loudspeakers, in response to Pyongyang’s fourth nuclear test on Jan. 6.

It deployed more loudspeakers — mounted on moving vehicles — along the frontier after the North’s rocket launch on Sunday, a defense ministry spokesman said.

“We have deployed more loudspeakers to the border and are airing the broadcast for longer hours every day since then,” the spokesman said without elaborating further.

The military reportedly airs the broadcast — hated by Pyongyang which last year threatened to open fire on the loudspeakers — about six hours a day.

The rocket launch, widely seen as a disguised long-range missile test, sparked international fury and prompted an agreement at the UN Security Council to slap new sanctions against the increasingly defiant state.

The launch was a violation of several existing UN resolutions that banned the nuclear-armed country from use of ballistic missile technology.

The propaganda broadcasts targeting North Korean troops have been turned on and off in line with the swings of volatile inter-Korea ties.

Seoul last August resumed them for the first time in 11 years after two of its border patrol soldiers were maimed by mines it said was planted by the North’s soldiers.

But the broadcasts came to a halt two weeks later after two Koreas reached an agreement to defuse growing military tension and Pyongyang expressed regret over the mine explosion.

Since the broadcasts resumed in January, the North responded by airing its own propaganda toward the South using similar massive batteries of loudspeakers along the border. — AFP


February 11, 2016
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