N Korea warns against Christmas lights near border
‘This is not something to be ignored quietly’:
S Korea: North Korea warned South Korea on Sunday of
“unexpected consequences” if Seoul displays Christmas lights near the
tense border, and vowed to retaliate for what it called propaganda
attempts. The South’s defence ministry said earlier it was considering a
request by a Seoul church group to put up Christmas lights on a steel
tower atop a military-controlled hill near the border.
The North’s official website-- Uriminzokkiri-- called the plan “a
meanattempt for psychological warfare” against the communist state and
threatened to retaliate immediately when the lights are switched on. The
155-metre (511 feet) hill in the South, about three kilometres (two
miles) from the border, is within range of North Korean gunfire.
“The enemy warmongers... should be aware that they should be held
responsible entirely for any unexpected consequences that may be caused
by their scheme,” it said.
“This issue... is not something to be ignored quietly,” it said. The
two Koreas in 2004 reached a deal to halt official-level cross-border
propaganda and the South stopped its annual Christmas illumination
ceremony.
AFP |