N. Korea cuts military hotline with South
North Korea severed its military hotline with South Korea on
Wednesday, breaking the last direct communication link between the two
countries at a time of heightened military tensions.
The decision coincided with an announcement that the North's
top political leadership would meet in the next few days to discuss an
unspecified "important issue" and make a "drastic turn".
The hotline move was relayed by a senior North Korean
military official to his South Korean counterpart just before the link was
severed.
"Under the situation where a war may break out any
moment, there is no need to keep up North-South military communications,"
the official was quoted as saying by the official Korean Central News Agency.
"From now, the North-South military communications will
be cut off," he said.
Several weeks ago North Korea severed the Red Cross hotline
that had been used for government-to-government communications in the absence
of diplomatic relations.
Severing the military hotline could affect operations at the
Seoul-funded Kaesong industrial complex in the North because it was used to
organise movements of people and vehicles in and out.
The industrial estate -- established in 2004 as a symbol of
cross-border cooperation -- has remained operational despite repeated crises in
relations. "We are negotiating with the North to prevent any operational
issues," an official from the Kaesong management committee told AFP.
"There is no problem with movement to and from the
Kaesong complex at the moment." Cutting the hotline was the latest in a
series of threats and actions that have raised tensions on the Korean peninsula
since the North's long-range rocket launch in December and its nuclear test
last month.
Both events triggered UN sanctions that infuriated
Pyongyang, which has spent the past month issuing increasingly bellicose
statements about unleashing an "all-out war".
Earlier Wednesday the North announced an imminent meeting of
the ruling party politburo and launched a scathing attack on South Korea's new
president, Park Geun-Hye.
Its Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea
accused Park of slander and provocation after she made a speech warning the
North that failure to abandon its nuclear weapons programme would result in its
collapse.
"If she keeps to the road of confrontation... she will
meet a miserable ruin," the committee said. In Seoul, some analysts
suggested the North was fast running out of threats and targets for its invective
as it sought to bully the international community into negotiating on
Pyongyang's terms.
AFP
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