Clashes break out near North Korea border over South activists' planned balloon launch
Hundreds try to stop launch of balloons with messages criticising North Korean leader

South Korean activists scuffled with egg-throwing residents in a border town yesterday as they tried to launch propaganda leaflets into the North despite threats of retaliation from Pyongyang.
Hundreds of riot police were deployed in the town of Paju, some 40km north of Seoul, as tensions flared when a dozen people with their faces hooded seized an activists' truck carrying balloons and leaflets.
Police also surrounded a bus carrying around two dozen activists after local residents hurled eggs at it, shouting "Go back. Don't put our lives in danger."
The activists had planned to release balloons carrying around 40,000 leaflets criticising the North's government across the heavily militarised frontier.
But with Pyongyang threatening to retaliate over the launch, local residents set up road blocks with tractors and a placard reading "Stop anti-North leaflet launch jeopardising our lives!".
"We will become the victims of shelling if leaflets are scattered," read another placard put up in a tree.