North Korea Threatens 'Sacred War' on South

W460

North Korea threatened on Wednesday to launch "a retaliatory sacred war" against South Korea for alleged slander as the two sides held rare talks on a stalled joint tourism project.

A Pyongyang government spokesman accused the South's front line army units of displaying slogans slandering the North's "army, system and dignity" and said they are "little short of a clear declaration of war".

The unidentified spokesman, in a statement carried by the official news agency, vowed to respond to any provocations with a "merciless retaliatory sacred war".

The South's Hankyoreh newspaper Monday quoted some of the slogans as reading "Let's stick swords and guns into the hearts of North Korean enemy army!" and "A club is the only medicine for a mad dog!"

The North made similar threats when South Korean reservists were found to be using pictures of Pyongyang's ruling Kim dynasty as rifle-range targets.

That practice has since been stopped.

Tensions have been high for well over a year, since the South accused the North of torpedoing a warship in March 2010 and killing 46 sailors.

Pyongyang denied the charge, but went on to shell a border island last November, killing four South Koreans including two civilians.

The latest warning came as 12 South Korean government officials and businesspeople traveled to a jointly-run mountain resort in the North to discuss the ownership of South Korean assets there.

Mount Kumgang opened in 1998 as a symbol of reconciliation and helped the impoverished communist state to earn tens of millions of dollars a year.

But the South suspended visits after a North Korean soldier shot dead a Seoul tourist who had strayed into a restricted military zone in 2008.

Last year the North seized or sealed off several South Korean properties in protest at the failure to restart the tours.

On June 17 Pyongyang warned it would dispose of properties in the zone, and asked South Korean parties to visit Kumgang by June 30 to discuss the process.

The South's unification ministry, which handles cross-border affairs, said the North should respect all agreements with private businesses and Seoul's government.

"We will make this stance clear to the North during today's meeting at Kumgang in order to protect the property ownership of our companies," said spokeswoman Lee Jong-Joo.

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