N. Korea launches trash balloons toward S. Korea for 2nd day: JCS
SEOUL, Sept. 15 (Yonhap) -- North Korea on Sunday launched balloons likely carrying trash toward South Korea for the second straight day, the South's military said.
The Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said it detected the latest launches, noting the balloons could travel toward the northern part of Gyeonggi Province, which surrounds Seoul, and the broader capital area.
The launch came after the North flew around 50 trash-carrying balloons toward the South from Saturday night to early Sunday, with about 10 trash bundles landing in Gyeonggi Province and Seoul, according to the JCS.
The JCS said the trash mostly consisted of paper, plastic bottles and other household garbage, while no hazardous substances have been found.
Since late May, the North has launched thousands of trash-carrying balloons toward the South in retaliation against anti-Pyongyang leaflets sent across the border by North Korean defectors and activists in South Korea.
In response, South Korea's military has been blasting daily anti-Pyongyang propaganda broadcasts through its loudspeakers on the border.
North Korea has bristled at the leaflet and loudspeaker campaigns on fears that an influx of outside information could pose a threat to the Kim Jong-un regime.
[email protected]
(END)
-
N. Korea apparently modifying Russian plane to possibly build airborne warning aircraft
-
N. Korea says it test-fired new tactical ballistic missile capable of carrying super-large warhead
-
(3rd LD) N. Korea fires multiple short-range ballistic missiles: JCS
-
(2nd LD) Biden, Harris offer congratulatory messages at first-ever White House Chuseok reception
-
(LEAD) U.S. will not accept N. Korea as nuclear state: Campbell
-
(News Focus) U.S. focus on 'interim' steps with N. Korea raises questions about policy direction
-
U.S. focus on 'interim' steps with N. Korea raises questions about policy direction
-
(News Focus) Cautious hopes reemerge for Japan's role over N. Korean nuclear conundrum
-
S. Korea's forming of diplomatic ties with Cuba signals deeper Latin America ties, deals blow to N. Korea
-
Trump's NATO remarks renew worries about U.S. commitment to alliance, N.K. deterrence