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Breaking-news : North Korea tears up agreements !

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North Korea tears up agreements !

Communist North Korea has said it is scrapping all military and political agreements signed with the South, accusing Seoul of hostile intent.

South Korea's government had pushed relations "to the brink of a war", the North's cross-border relations body said on state media.

South Korea expressed regret at the announcement and called for dialogue.

Relations have deteriorated since South Korea's President Lee Myung-bak took a harder line approach to the North.

One agreement the North said it was to scrap covers the maritime border in the Yellow Sea.

The two countries' navies fought bloody skirmishes in the area of the de facto border in 2002 and 1999.

"All the agreed points concerning the issue of putting an end to the political and military confrontation between the North and the South will be nullified," the Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea said.


It said that the situation on the Korean peninsula had reached a point where there was "neither way to improve [relations] nor hope to bring them on track".
The North has stepped up rhetorical attacks on the administration of South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, who has promised to stop the free flow of aid to the North unless it moves to end its nuclear weapons programme.

Earlier this week, North Korea criticised the appointment of a new South Korean unification minister, describing the choice of Hyun In-taek as evidence that the South wanted to intensify confrontation between the two Korean states.

The BBC's John Sudworth in Seoul says some analysts believe that Pyongyang is trying to build up tensions with the South in order to give itself more negotiating power with the new US administration.

A more pessimistic analysis suggests that the rising tension does raise the possibility of small-scale military clashes, says our correspondent.

Regrets

"Our government expresses deep regret," said Kim Ho-Nyoun, spokesman for South Korea's unification ministry, which handles cross-border affairs.

"We urge North Korea to accept our call for dialogue as soon as possible," he said.



The two states are still technically at war because their three-year conflict ended in a truce, not a peace treaty, in 1953.

The peninsula remains divided by a heavily fortified Demilitarised Zone, with thousands of troops stationed on both sides of the border.

Relations improved in the past decade, with North Korean leader Kim Jong-il meeting with then-South Korean President Kim Dae-jung in a historic summit in 2000.

But tensions have been high since Mr Lee took office in Seoul nearly a year ago pledging to get tough with Pyongyang.

He began rolling back his predecessors' "sunshine policy" of unconditional aid to the North.

The North responded by cutting off talks, suspending key joint projects and stepping up criticism of Mr Lee who it calls a "traitor".

"Never to be condoned are the crimes the Lee group has committed against the nation and reunification by bedevilling overnight the inter-Korean relations that had favourably developed amidst the support and encouragement of all the Koreans and ruthlessly scrapping the inter-Korean agreements," the North said on Friday.

Story from BBC NEWS:
BBC NEWS | Asia-Pacific | North Korea tears up agreements

Published: 2009/01/30 09:15:43 GMT

© BBC MMIX

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N Korea issues warning to Seoul !

The North Korean military has warned South Korea that its "confrontational" policies may force it to retaliate.

North Korea's priority was to build up its "nuclear deterrent force" and retain it while there was the slightest threat from the US, Pyongyang added.

South Korea has ordered troops to strengthen their guard, officials said.

Ties between the Koreas have chilled since President Lee Myung-bak took office in Seoul. The remarks also come ahead of Barack Obama's inauguration.

New weapons

South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, who took office last year, has pledged to get tough with Pyongyang over its nuclear programme.

US and South Korean efforts to persuade the communist nation to give up its nuclear ambitions in exchange for aid appear to have stalled.

Selig Harrison, an American expert who has just returned from North Korea, said he was told that the country had "weaponised" enough declared plutonium stocks to produce four to five nuclear weapons.

He was also told that the weapons could not be inspected.

But Mr Harrison said that officials also told him that if the incoming US administration wanted better relations, the two sides could "become intimate friends".

The statement from Pyongyang was a signal to US President-elect Barack Obama ahead of his inauguration next week, analysts said.

A six-nation deal aimed at persuading North Korea to abandon its nuclear ambitions in exchange for aid has faltered in recent months.

The US wants North Korea to disclose its full nuclear arsenal, but the two sides disagree on how the information should be verified.



Story from BBC NEWS:
BBC NEWS | Asia-Pacific | N Korea issues warning to Seoul

Published: 2009/01/17 20:48:45 GMT

© BBC MMIX

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