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South Korea resumes propaganda war with North after landmine blasts maim two soldiers

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In 2010, South Korea restarted radio broadcasts and restored 11 loudspeakers as part of punitive measures taken after a warship sinking blamed on North Korea that killed 46 South Korean sailors earlier that year. But South Korea didn’t go ahead with plans to resume loudspeaker broadcasts at the time. Photo: Reuters
Agence France-Presse

South Korea has ordered border propaganda operations against North Korea to resume for the first time in 11 years, in retaliation for landmine blasts that maimed two of its soldiers during a frontier patrol.

The Defence Ministry said banks of loudspeakers positioned at various spots along the border would be switched on for the first time since 2004 and used to blast out messages denouncing North Korean provocations.

 The move will infuriate North Korea and likely trigger a surge in cross-border tensions at a time of already severely strained relations between Seoul and Pyongyang.

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 The order came hours after Seoul vowed Pyongyang would pay a “harsh price” for allegedly planting the landmines that detonated last Tuesday in the South Korean half of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) - a buffer area flanking both sides of the inter-Korean frontier.

A South Korean military officer shows pictures of North Korean "wooden box" land mines during after South Korea accused the North of planting landmines that maimed two soldiers on border patrol. Photo: AFP
A South Korean military officer shows pictures of North Korean "wooden box" land mines during after South Korea accused the North of planting landmines that maimed two soldiers on border patrol. Photo: AFP
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 One soldier injured in the blasts underwent a double leg amputation, while another had one leg removed.

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