Politics

"Rain Punishment": The DPRK threatened South Korea with war as in Europe and in the Middle East (photo)

Pyongyang believes that the "unfriendly" step from Seoul can lead to global consequences that will become the "catalyst" of the end of the existence of one of the states. South Korea was threatened in the DPRK, "as in Europe and the Middle East. " All because of certain decisions made in Seoul regarding Pyongyang. About it reports Yonhup. It is noted that in September the Constitutional Court of South Korea decided to cancel the ban on the transfer abroad of anti -Phoenian leaflets.

This is due to the fact that this part of the law on the development of intercordic relations is unconstitutional, because it limits the right to freedom of expression. In North Korea, they said that such a step is provocative and can have its consequences. In particular, the Central Telegraph Agency of Korea (CAK) stated that campaigns from the mailing of leaflets that criticize the DPRK ruler Kim Jong -in can become a "catalyst" of the end of South Korea.

"The position of our revolutionary armed forces is that we have to shed a much larger one than in the previous times," Fire Rain Punishment "is not only on the base of distribution of leaflets, but also on the puppets whobloot," the message reads.

In Pyongyang, Seoul was called the "malicious psychosocial war", and in the future it can allegedly lead to a more global conflict, similar to what is happening in Europe and the Middle East, referring to the Russian Federation against Ukraine and Hamas attack on Israel. For many years, refugees from the DPRK in South Korea and other activists sent balloons with postcards to North Korea. They criticized Kim Jong -in regime that Pyongyang did not like it.

There it was believed that an influx of external information could be a threat to dictatorship. In October 2014, the DPRK fired such leaflets from machine guns, and several balls were hit by South Korea, although no one was injured. In December 2020, a law was adopted in Seoul, which prohibits the spread of leaflets.