Warns Seoul About Cross-Border Propaganda Eid, Kim Jong-un's Sister: Patience Has Limits
JAKARTA - Kim Yo-jong, the sister sister of the ruling North Korean leader Kim Jong-un warned on Sunday that South Korea had to pay a "harvest price" for sending propaganda leaflets across the border the previous day.
Kim, deputy director of the Department of the Labor Party's Central Committee, said the "various types of political legislation leaflets and dirty things" were spread by South Korea near the border and further into the interior.
"We strongly condemn the embarrassing and dirty actions of the ROK waste that provokes spreading political strategic matters and anti-DPRK conspiracies once again regardless of repeated warnings," he said in a statement broadcast by North Korea's Central News Agency, referring to South Korea and North Korea under the official name, the Republic of Korea and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. November 17th.
"There will be no owner of the house who will not be angry to see dirty garbage scattered in a clean yard, which even village dogs don't like touching them," he said.
North Korea reacted angrily to South Korean activists who sent balloons across the border carrying anti-Pyongyang propaganda leaflets and South Korean consumer goods.
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Kim said North Korean security forces had blocked the area where the leaflets were found and were doing cleaning work.
"There is a limit to patience," said Kim.
"The anger of the DPRK people towards the most disgusting village dogs has reached extreme points. The garbage must pay an expensive price," he said.