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South Korea is on alert because of more garbage balloons from the North

The South Korean military said it was on alert as more balloons loaded with garbage could arrive from North Korea on Sunday.

North Korea sent hundreds of balloons filled with garbage bags into the South in two waves last week, describing them as a response to anti-Pyongyang propaganda balloons sent in the other direction by South Korean activists.

Pyongyang announced a ban on the balloons on Sunday, but a few days later a South Korean group called Fighters for a Free North Korea said it had sent ten balloons with K-pop music and 200,000 leaflets against ruler Kim Jong Un into space.

The South Korean military is “monitoring the situation closely and with great vigilance” as “there is a possibility that more garbage balloons will descend tomorrow,” its spokesman told AFP on Saturday.

North Korea had declared that it would respond with a hundred times as much “garbage and rubbish” if more South Korean leaflets were sent.

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The North Korean balloons landed in several locations in the South last week and found garbage such as cigarette butts, cardboard scraps and old batteries.

In response to the balloons, South Korea on Tuesday completely suspended a 2018 military agreement with the North that was intended to reduce tensions between the neighbors.

Authorities in Seoul condemned the North Korean balloons as a “low-class” action and threatened countermeasures that Pyongyang would find “unbearable.”

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Activists in South Korea have long been sending balloons northward filled with anti-Pyongyang propaganda, cash, rice and Korean television series on USB sticks.

These incidents have always infuriated North Korea, as the government is extremely sensitive to its population having access to South Korean pop culture.

Kuensaem, another South Korean activist group, told AFP it had thrown 500 plastic bottles into the sea near the border with North Korea on Friday.

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The bottles were filled with rice, cash and a USB stick with the South Korean series “Crash Landing on You” – which tells a romance between a wealthy South Korean heiress and a North Korean army officer.

The group has been doing this twice a month since 2015.

“We were just doing what we have been doing for a long time, which is helping starving North Koreans,” the group’s leader, Park Jung-oh, told AFP on Saturday.

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Tensions related to competing propaganda have already escalated dramatically in the past.

In 2020, amid accusations from the North, Pyongyang unilaterally cut all official military and political communications with Seoul and blew up a defunct inter-Korean liaison office on its side of the border.

Last year, South Korea’s Constitutional Court overturned a 2020 law that criminalized the sending of anti-Pyongyang propaganda, calling it an unreasonable restriction on free expression.

Kim Jong Un’s powerful sister Kim Yo Jong mocked South Korea for complaining about the balloons last week, saying North Koreans were simply exercising their freedom of expression.