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North and South Korea exchange live fire

outh Korea says it has fired shells into North Korean waters in response to live fire drills carr...
Newstalk
Newstalk

09.30 31 Mar 2014


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North and South Korea exchange...

North and South Korea exchange live fire

Newstalk
Newstalk

09.30 31 Mar 2014


Share this article


outh Korea says it has fired shells into North Korean waters in response to live fire drills carried out by Pyongyang. Residents of a South Korean island on the front-line were evacuated as both countries exchanged fire across their disputed western maritime border.

Anxious residents sought refuge in shelters on Yeonpyeong Island where, in 2010, North Korean artillery killed four South Koreans.

One islander, Kang Myeong-sung said he did not see any fighter jets but could hear the boom of the shells. North Korea had announced it was going to conduct some military drills.

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Reporter Mark Stone said "These are worrying developments...but no one has been injured, no one has been killed and indeed none of these rockets or missiles landed on any military installations or any land, so this is effectively both sides showing their strength".

It comes a day after North Korea warned it had not ruled out a fourth test of its nuclear deterrent in retaliation for the US conducting "madcap nuclear war" exercises in South Korea this month.

Every year the US and South Korea conduct joint battle exercises involving some 12,500 US and as many as 200,000 South Korean troops.

Operation Key Resolve is a computer-simulated drill which plays out war-time scenarios that could result from a North Korean invasion of the South, while Operation Foal Eagle is a two-month air, sea and land field-training exercise.

The annual drills are regularly condemned by the North as preludes to a US invasion, though Washington insists the exercises are defensive.

Tensions in the area remain high after North Korea tested two missiles capable of hitting Japan last Wednesday.

Stone added "This is the time of year when tensions on the peninsula always escalate - the South Koreans and the Americans have their own exercises, North Korea claims its can do its own thing and have its exercises. The thought always is, that every year, North Korea is becoming more and more technologically advanced - they have nuclear weapons".

The Korean War in the early 1950s did not end with a peace treaty but an armistice, so technically both sides are still in a state of war.


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