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North Korea to cut S Korea links | |
(about 7 hours later) | |
North Korea has announced that it will close the land border and cut non-military phone links with South Korea. | |
North Korea's army has told the South "to strictly restrict and cut off all the overland passages" across the fortified border from 1 December. | |
A Red Cross office in the North with the only civilian phone link will shut. | |
If implemented the move will be a blow to inter-Korean relations which have deteriorated since South Korean President Lee Myung-bak came to office. | |
And it comes despite some progress in international negotiations over dismantling North Korea's nuclear programme. | And it comes despite some progress in international negotiations over dismantling North Korea's nuclear programme. |
The border closure decision had been taken because "reckless confrontation" from South Korea was "beyond the danger level", according to the North's official KCNA news agency. | |
The agency report added: "The South Korean puppet authorities should never forget that the present inter-Korean relations are at the crucial crossroads of existence and total severance." | |
The phone lines from the Red Cross office in the border village of Panmunjom were the only non-military link between the countries. | |
Phone and mail links between ordinary people have been cut since the end of the 1950-53 war. | |
Announcing the closure of the government-controlled Red Cross office, the North criticised the South for co-sponsoring a United Nations resolution criticising its human rights record. | |
"It is really appalling that the puppet regime is taking a leading role in the racket of a so-called UN resolution on human rights in the North," the statement carried by KCNA said. | |
A vote on the resolution is expected later in November. It comes a month after a UN human-rights investigator strongly criticised North Korea, urging it to end public executions and provide food for the people not just the elite. | |
'Negative impact' | |
South Korea's unification ministry's spokesman Kim Ho-Nyoun said he did not believe the North intended a complete border closure. | |
"If the North carries them out, it would have a negative impact on what has been achieved in inter-Korean relations," he said. | |
South Korea has funded the Kaesong industrial complex just over the border in the North, and a ban on border crossings would make it very difficult for the plant to continue operating. | South Korea has funded the Kaesong industrial complex just over the border in the North, and a ban on border crossings would make it very difficult for the plant to continue operating. |
Some 30,000 North Korean workers are employed by South Korean companies at the complex, and jobs there are highly prized. | |
Relations between the Koreas have become increasingly strained since February when conservative President Lee Myung-bak took office in Seoul, pledging to get tough with Pyongyang over its nuclear weapons programme. | Relations between the Koreas have become increasingly strained since February when conservative President Lee Myung-bak took office in Seoul, pledging to get tough with Pyongyang over its nuclear weapons programme. |
Last month North Korea threatened to reduce the South to rubble unless it stopped activists sending anti-Pyongyang leaflets attached to balloons into the communist state. | Last month North Korea threatened to reduce the South to rubble unless it stopped activists sending anti-Pyongyang leaflets attached to balloons into the communist state. |
Speculation | Speculation |
Despite the hostile turn in inter-Korean relations, North Korea has continued to make progress in six-nation talks over its nuclear programme despite frequent setbacks. | Despite the hostile turn in inter-Korean relations, North Korea has continued to make progress in six-nation talks over its nuclear programme despite frequent setbacks. |
It says it is disabling its main nuclear plant at Yongbyon after the US removed the North from a blacklist of state sponsors of terrorism. | It says it is disabling its main nuclear plant at Yongbyon after the US removed the North from a blacklist of state sponsors of terrorism. |
The latest escalation in tension comes amid speculation that North Korea's leader Kim Jong-il may have suffered from a serious stroke, though the North has insisted he is in good health and still firmly in charge. | The latest escalation in tension comes amid speculation that North Korea's leader Kim Jong-il may have suffered from a serious stroke, though the North has insisted he is in good health and still firmly in charge. |