North Korea's military vowed a new and unusually specific threat to its neighbors, saying it would reduce South Korea "to ashes" in less than four minutes.
The statement, released Monday when programming was interrupted on North Korea's state TV by a special report, comes amid rising tensions on the Korean peninsula.
Earlier this month, North Korea was unsuccessful in a long-range missile launch,
prompting worries that North Korea may conduct another nuclear test.
South Korean officials say new satellite images show that North Korea
has been digging a tunnel in what appears to be preparation for a third atomic test.
According to the Associated
Press, the statement from North Korea was unusual in promising something
soon and in describing a specific period of time.
The North Korean military
threatened to "reduce all the rat-like groups and the bases for
provocations to ashes in three or four minutes, (or) in much shorter
time, by unprecedented peculiar means and methods of our own style."
For months the North has castigated South Korean President Lee Myung-bak and the conservative administration for insulting their leadership and criticizing a new cruise missile capable of striking anywhere in the south.
South Korean officials responded,
urging North Korea to end the threats. "We urge North Korea to
immediately stop this practice," Unification Ministry spokesman Kim
Hyung-suk said, according to the Associated Press. "We express deep
concern that the North's threats and accusations have worsened
inter-Korean ties and heightened tensions."
Meanwhile, in a meeting Sunday with a North Korean delegation
in Beijing, China's senior official on foreign policy praised the
leadership shown by North Korea's new young leader, Kim Jong Un.
The meeting follows the April 13
launch of what the United States called a disguised ballistic missile
test by North Korea. The rocket disintegrated minutes after launch.
-- With reporting by Ron Recinto
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