NewsKim Jong Un's sister warns of retaliation over balloon launches

Kim Jong Un's sister warns of retaliation over balloon launches

The dictator of North Korea with his formidable sister Kim Jo Dzong
The dictator of North Korea with his formidable sister Kim Jo Dzong
Images source: © Getty Images | 2018 Korea Summit Press Pool

16 July 2024 19:59

The sister of Kim Jong Un, North Korea's dictator, has issued a final warning to the authorities of a neighbouring country. The influential regime representative warned that Pyongyang would respond if there was another balloon launch from South Korea.

Warnings issued by Kim Yo Jong were conveyed on Tuesday by the North Korean agency KCNA. The message from Kim Jong Un's sister is meant to intimidate Seoul and put an end to the South's propaganda activities.

The wind blows balloons beyond the buffer zone on the border of the two countries and can reach the North's residents. According to the KCNA report, balloons contain dangerous cargo. Propaganda leaflets are packed into bags attached to the balloons. They contain content directed against the authorities in Pyongyang.

Balloon war: humanitarian aid from South Korea, rubbish from the North

"The situation seems to be unacceptable. Once again, I issue a stern warning," the agency quoted Kim Yo Jong as saying. She also mentioned that the balloons cause "inconvenience to residents."

Tuesday's warnings are another attempt to address this irritating regime procedure. On Sunday, Kim Yo Jong promised South Korea would pay a "very high price" for these leaflets.

They have already been discovered in 17 places in the border region.

Representatives of the Korean regime have long been addressing the issue of these balloon launches. So far, however, they have mostly spoken of "rubbish" and "filth" sent by the neighbour into North Korean territory.

No one mentions what the packages prepared by South Korean activists actually contain. It is humanitarian aid. In addition to leaflets containing words of support and encouragement, food, medicine, and discs with South Korean TV series are packed into the bags attached to the balloons.

Pyongyang has already conducted several "retaliatory actions." More than two thousand balloons containing waste paper, worn clothing, and soil with traces of human faeces and parasites have been sent across the border.

- Once again, I emphasise that all responsibility lies with North Korea if any South Korean citizens suffer harm because of balloons carrying rubbish from the North - said Col. Lee Sung-jun, a spokesman for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, on Monday.

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