N. Korean defectors' group says it sent leaflets to North overnight | Inquirer News

N. Korean defectors’ group says it sent leaflets to North overnight

/ 02:07 PM June 23, 2020

Fighters for a Free North Korea-Yonhap via The Korea Herald/Asia News Network

SEOUL — A group of North Korean defectors in the South claimed Tuesday it sent anti-North Korea leaflets across the border overnight from the western border city of Paju.

Police said one of the balloons used for sending the leaflets was found in a town in the mountainous eastern province of Gangwon.

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“(We) sent anti-North Korea leaflets over (to the North) between 11 p.m. and midnight on Monday (from a town) in Paju,” Park Sang-hak, chief of Fighters for a Free North Korea, said. The group picked a very dark location to avoid police surveillance, he added.

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According to Park, six members of the group, which has been active in anti-North Korea leafleting, sent to the North around 500,000 leaflets carried by 20 large helium balloons.

Some 500 pamphlets depicting South Korea’s success story, 2,000 American one-dollar bills and 1,000 SD cards were also flown to the North, along with the leaflets, he said.

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The covert operation by the group came as the police were keeping watch around-the-clock along the border, a move aimed at blocking any anti-North leafleting by activists and defectors amid escalating inter-Korean tensions over the issue.

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Taking issue with such leafleting campaigns in the South, North Korea made a series of inflammatory remarks toward South Korea and President Moon Jae-in in recent weeks.

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Early Monday, the North’s state media also threatened to send around 12 million propaganda leaflets to South Korea in retaliation against South Korea’s “failure” to stop anti-North leaflet campaigns here.

At least one of the balloons, flown by defectors in South Korea on Monday, was found on a hill in Hongcheon, a South Korean county located nearly 100 kilometers southeast of Paju, on Tuesday morning, police said.

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“We went to the scene upon receiving a call from a resident that a plastic ballon presumed to be in use for anti-North Korean leafleting was hanging from a tree,” a police officer said. “We understand the balloon was floated by a defector group last night.”

An image of the balloon showed that it was carrying images of North Korea’s ruling Kim family members, including the current leader Kim Jong-un and his younger sister Yo-jong, as well as bundles of leaflets.

The unification ministry called for a halt to such leaflet campaigns.

“Leaflets, whether from the North or the South, do no good for inter-Korean relations, and the two leaders agreed in the Panmunjom Declaration to stop the leafleting,” a ministry official said, referring to a 2018 summit agreement between President Moon Jae-in and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.

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“From this point of view, the government believes that the unproductive distribution of leaflets must be immediately halted to improve inter-Korean relations and promote peace on the Korean peninsula,” the official said. Yonhap

TAGS: Diplomacy, DMZ, East Asia, Kim Yo-Jong, Military, Moon Jae-In, North Korea, Politics, South korea

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