North Korea has formally proclaimed South Korea as a "threatening" state in its constitution, denoting whenever Pyongyang first h...
North Korea has formally proclaimed South Korea as a "threatening" state in its constitution, denoting whenever Pyongyang first has recognized the lawful changes called for by pioneer Kim Jong Un recently.
The move was described as "an inevitable and legitimate measure taken in keeping with the requirement of the DPRK Constitution which clearly defines the ROK as a hostile state" by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) earlier this week. The announcement came after North Korean soldiers blew up roads and railways connecting the two Koreas. "With Kim defining Seoul as his country's "principal enemy" in January and expressing disinterest in reunification, the deterioration of relations between the two Koreas has reached a new low.
"Part of the phased complete separation of its territory, where its sovereignty is exercised, from the ROK's territory," according to KCNA, was the recent North Korean army action to physically cut off roads and railways to South Korea.
Last week, North Korea held a vital gathering of its elastic stamp parliament, affirming the changes to the country's fundamental regulation in accordance with Kim's requests. However, the state media did not provide any additional information regarding the changes to the constitution. Beforehand, under a 1991 between Korean accord, relations between the North and South were characterized as a "extraordinary relationship" as a component of an interaction focused on possible reunification, instead of state-to-state relations.
North Korea has accused Seoul of using drones to drop anti-regime propaganda leaflets on Pyongyang, the country's capital, in addition to the strengthening of the border. Kim met a security meeting to coordinate an arrangement of "quick military activity" accordingly. The military in Seoul initially denied sending drones north, but it has since declined to comment. Dissident gatherings in the South have long sent publicity northwards, ordinarily conveyed by inflatables, and aficionados have been known to fly little, difficult to-identify drones made of extended polypropylene into the North. Five of Pyongyang's drones crossed the border in 2022, prompting the South Korean military to fire warning shots and deploy fighter jets, but none of the drones were ultimately shot down. North Korea has also sent drones southward.
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