North Korea is building a wall and excavating the ground in the demilitarized zone!
report Mehr News, Yonhab, citing a military source who did not want to be named, claimed that North Korea is building a road and a wall inside the demilitarized zone between the two Koreas.
According to Yonhap, these activities are taking place north of the military demarcation line that extends to the middle of the demilitarized zone. This report was published after last week’s incident in the demilitarized zone of the two Koreas. During that incident, South Korean forces fired a warning shot after North Korean soldiers partially crossed the border line of Seoul.
South Korean officials said the incident was likely an accident, and Yonhap quoted a Seoul military spokesman as saying that some North Korean soldiers were using their own tools. They were carrying.
According to a military source who spoke to Yonhap on condition of anonymity, “The South Korean army has recently started building walls, excavating land and building roads in some The areas between the military border line and the border of North Korea have been demilitarized.”
He also claimed that it is not clear what North Korea is building. In response to this report, the South Korean army announced in a statement that it is closely monitoring the activities of the North Korean army and further analysis and evaluation is needed.
South Korea’s intelligence agency recently claimed in an interview with AFP that it has identified signs of destruction of parts of the railway connecting the two countries by North Korea.
Recent developments have taken place following the escalation of tension between the two Koreas after balloons containing garbage entered the airspace of South Korea. South Korea claims that its northern neighbor sent these balloons to Seoul in response to the announcements that anti-North Korean activists have spread on the border of the two countries!
In response to this action, South Korea has restarted its propaganda loudspeakers on the border between the two Koreas. Kim Yo-jong, the deputy minister of communications and a member of North Korea’s State Affairs Commission, who is also known as the right-hand man of the country’s leader, Kim Jong-un, warned about South Korea’s action. He said that “South Korea’s recent action in deploying high-powered loudspeakers on the border of the two Koreas and broadcasting announcements is a prelude to entering a very dangerous situation.”