<W解説>韓国軍による対北宣伝放送がまた再開=南北の応酬続く様相
South Korean military resumes anti-North Korean propaganda broadcasts again = North-South exchanges continue
On the 19th of this month, the South Korean military resumed propaganda broadcasts to North Korea using loudspeakers near the inter-Korean military demarcation line for the first time in 39 days.
The South Korean military has decided to continue its propaganda broadcasts for the time being, and the exchange of messages between the two Koreas is likely to continue. As tensions between the two Koreas continue to grow, North Korea has been sending out messages of garbage and filth since late May.
The balloons were sent to South Korea intermittently. This was seen as a countermeasure against North Korean defectors sending leaflets critical of the regime from South Korea to North Korea. The balloons sent from North Korea were seen as balloons in various parts of South Korea.
The garbage that was tied to the car fell onto the car and caused damage such as broken windows, causing chaos throughout South Korea. At the time, the South Korean government said, "We have shown the world the true nature and standard of the North Korean regime."
The South Korean government subsequently made a formal decision last month to completely suspend the effectiveness of the inter-Korean military agreement.
At the time, the presidential office emphasized that the suspension would allow for "sufficient and immediate measures to be taken against North Korean provocations."
The South Korean military's propaganda broadcasts to North Korea began in 1962, and have been suspended and resumed repeatedly since then as relations between the two Koreas improved and worsened.
The content of the seminar includes an appeal to the public that South Korea's democratic system is superior to North Korea's political system, criticism of the North Korean regime, news from South Korea and abroad, and South Korean songs.
The purpose is to cause unrest in the North. On the 9th of last month, the South Korean military resumed its propaganda broadcasts for the first time in six years. The broadcast lasted for about two hours. "Hello, fellow North Koreans."
The broadcast began with a call from Naeun, who talked about how Samsung Electronics, a South Korean company, has the highest number of smartphone shipments in 38 countries around the world, and the inflation trend in the North Korean market.
During the broadcast, K-POP songs such as the hit song "Dynamite" by the popular Korean group "BTS" were also played. Meanwhile, North Korea later announced that Kim's sister, Yo Jong, had died this month.
On the 16th, he issued a statement through the Korean Central News Agency. He expressed anger at the fact that balloons carrying leaflets had been sent from South Korea again, and hinted at retaliation, saying, "We must be prepared to pay a terrible price."
On the 18th, North Korea sent a "filthy balloon" toward South Korea for the first time in 22 days. In response, the South Korean military resumed propaganda broadcasts toward North Korea on the 19th for the first time in 39 days.
He pointed out the contradiction between the “Act on the Expulsion of Reactionary Ideology and Culture,” enacted by the Eun administration in 2020 with the main purpose of cracking down on the influx of Korean culture, and Kim Jong Un’s ideology and actions.
According to the report, the broadcast said, "In South Korea, there is a word called otaku, which means a person who enjoys a wide range of hobbies deeply. There are also otaku in North Korea.
"Kim Jong Un is so fond of basketball that he sleeps with the ball in his arms," the report said. Kim Jong Un studied abroad in Switzerland as a teenager, but at the time he was so fond of basketball that he was obsessed with the sport.
A former classmate testified that Kim was an avid reader of the American comic "Slam Dunk." The broadcast pointed this out, saying, "Kim Jong Un himself praises American culture, but he doesn't want the people to know about it.
"Recently, North Korean authorities have been censoring young people who watch South Korean videos under the Act on the Elimination of Reactionary Ideology and Culture," a North Korea expert told the Chosun Ilbo.
The country strictly controls the country by issuing mass executions and prison sentences to students who are not related to it, but in reality, the supreme leader is in a state of “neronambul (being lenient with family members and strict with non-family members)” and enjoys foreign culture to the fullest.
"The propaganda broadcast on the 9th of last month lasted only two hours and was not continued the following day, but this time the South Korean military
The station has been broadcasting every day since it resumed broadcasting on March 18. Military authorities plan to continue broadcasting for the time being until North Korea stops releasing the "filthy balloons." It looks like the exchange of words between the North and South Koreas will continue for a while.
2024/07/22 14:38 KST
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