North Korean leader Kim Jong-un’s sister has demanded a detailed “explanation” from Seoul over a drone it accused South Korea of flying over its territory, state media reported yesterday.
The North said on Saturday that a craft crossed from the South Korean border county of Ganghwa into the North Korean city of Kaesong in early this month, and released photos of wreckage from the drone it claimed to have shot down.
Seoul rejected the claim, with its defense ministry saying the drone was not a model operated by its military.
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“Fortunately, the ROK’s military expressed an official stand that it was not done by itself and that it has no intention to provoke or irritate us,” Kim Yo-jong said, using South Korea’s official name in a statement carried by the North Korean state-run Korean Central News Agency (KCNA).
“But a detail [sic] explanation should be made about the actual case of a drone that crossed the southern border of our republic,” KCNA quoted her as saying.
In response to the North’s accusation, Seoul’s military said its own investigation had revealed it does not “possess the unmanned aerial vehicle in question, nor did it operate any unmanned aerial vehicles at the time and date specified by North Korea.”
South Korean President Lee Jae-myung on Saturday ordered a “swift and rigorous investigation” by a joint military-police investigative team.
On the possibility that civilians operated the drone, Lee said: “If true, it is a serious crime that threatens peace on the Korean Peninsula and national security.”
However, Kim Yo-jong said she did not care whether it was a military or civilian drone, saying “that is not the one [detail] we want to know.”
“Clear is just the fact that the drone from the ROK violated the airspace of our country,” she added, according to KCNA.
Kim Yo-jong ended her statement calling South Korea “a group of hooligans and scrap.”
Analysts said Kim Yo Jong’s statement suggested Pyongyang wanted to treat the issue as a diplomatic matter.
“Pyongyang has indicated it has no intention of turning this into a military issue through Kim [Yo-jong]’s statement,” said Hong Min, an analyst at the Korea Institute for National Unification.
However, her demand for an explanation “signals a shift toward a diplomatic offensive by holding the authorities accountable” for the incursion, he said.
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