
Kim Yo Jong, a key figure in the North Korean government under her brother Kim Jong Un, expressed her indignation toward South Koreans who have been sending propaganda-carrying bubbles over the boundary on Sunday.
Her comment came after the most recent sample of what she called “dirty flyers” were discovered in North Korean place along the frontier, according to a statement released by the standard Asian Central News Agency in English.
In recent months, kites have been flying between the two Koreas in tit-for-tat campaigns, including those that contain propaganda sent by North Koreans to the North and those that are sent south in protest.
Later in June, North Korea last sent rubbish-carrying bubbles to South Korea, but the country does not prohibit activists from spreading propaganda there, deeming it to be an expression of free speech.
North Korean defectors frequently lead the organizations sending the bubbles from the South.
What was said by Kim Yo Jong?
Kim said, using the letters of the two Koreas ‘ standard names,” Despite the numerous instructions of the DPRK, the ROK slime are not stopping this pure and dirty play.” The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea ( DPRK) is the official name for North Korea, whereas the Republic of Korea ( ROK ) is the official name of South Korea.
The ROK clans may be fed up with enduring a terrible embarrassment, she said, and they must be prepared to pay a price that is too large.
Her remarks come as North and South relationships are at their lowest items in times, with Pyongyang conducting more and more weapons tests as it strengthens ties with Russia.
Rising hostilities
According to analysts, Pyongyang views balloon-borne advertising as a serious issue because it forbids the majority of its 26 million citizens from receiving standard news access.
South Korea set up massive headphones along the border in June to transmit anti-North Asian advertising in response to the North’s trash bubbles once more.
The headphones were past used six years ago.
Seoul has even totally suspended a tension-reducing military package in protest at the North’s bubbles