The hardline brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un today blasted South Korea who released anti-government propaganda leaflets across the border from a balloon, warning that they would pay a heavy price.
South Korea has been the scene of a revenge balloon campaign in recent weeks, with Pyongyang flying garbage-filled balloons in the South in protest against those carrying propaganda sent to the North. supported by South Korean officials. Kim Yo-jong, the government’s chief spokeswoman, said she had been informed that the latest pamphlets and dirty materials were found in North Korean areas near the border, according to a statement published by the Korean government in English. said. Middle story. Company.
ROK is the abbreviation of the name of the South Korean government. North Korean forces are now conducting extensive searches, burning and disposing of debris they find, he said.
Despite repeated warnings from the DPRK, the ROK scum are not stopping this dirty and dirty game, he added, using the brand name of the North’s government. The ROK family will be tired of the bitter suffering and will be ready to pay a heavy price.
Pyongyang has already sent more than a thousand balloons carrying debris to the South, in retaliation, it says, for balloons carrying propaganda critical of Kim Jong-un’s regime. In response, Seoul completely suspended a military agreement aimed at reducing tensions and resumed some broadcasts from loudspeakers along the border.
Relations between the North and South are at one of their lowest levels in years, with Pyongyang ramping up its missile tests as it moves closer to Russia. Seoul and Washington have accused Pyongyang of supplying Moscow with weapons for the war in Ukraine, which would violate sanctions against both countries.
Last year, the nuclear-armed North declared Seoul its main adversary and abandoned facilities for media and diplomacy in Seoul, while boosting security along the border.