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N. Korea rejects South's new bid to visit joint zone
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) April 19, 2013


S. Korea court jails North spy for China activities
Seoul (AFP) April 19, 2013 - A South Korean court on Friday sentenced a convicted North Korean spy to four years in prison for collecting information on the South's intelligence agents working in China.

The 43-year-old had insisted she was just a housewife who had been forcibly recruited by North Korean intelligence when she went to China to find work to feed her family in the North.

The court in the southern city of Suwon rejected her story and said her actions had led to the arrest of a South Korean agent.

"She was involved in a very serious crime which threatened the existence and safety of our nation," the court declared.

The woman had arrived in Seoul in June as a refugee, but was detained after questioning by security authorities.

Thousands of North Korean spies have been arrested in South Korea since the end of the 1950-1953 Korean War.

Intelligence officials say a large number entered the South by posing as refugees who fled the North.

North Korea on Friday rejected a new request by businessmen from the South to deliver food and supplies to their staff inside a closed joint-industrial zone, officials said.

North Korea has blocked access to the zone in Kaesong -- which lies 10 kilometres (six miles) inside its border -- since April 3 amid soaring military tensions on the Korean peninsula.

South Koreans in the industrial zone were told they could leave when they wanted, but as of Friday there were still about 190 remaining.

The North barred a delegation of 10 businessmen representing the 123 South Korean firms in Kaesong from bringing food and other daily necessities to their staff on Wednesday, and turned down the group's request again Friday.

"In a notice sent today, North Korea said it would not allow them to visit Kaesong on April 22," a unification ministry spokesman told AFP.

The North withdrew all its 53,000 workers, suspended operations in the zone on April 8 and rejected Seoul's offers of dialogue to resolve the situation.

Kaesong was established in 2004 as a rare symbol of inter-Korean cooperation.

Neither of the Koreas has allowed previous crises to significantly affect the complex, which is seen as a bellwether of stability on the Korean peninsula.

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NUKEWARS
NKorea 'bark worse than bite': expert
Vienna (AFP) April 18, 2013
North Korea is incapable of carrying out most of its threats of recent weeks, a prominent US expert who has visited the country's nuclear facilities several times said Thursday. "The bark is much greater than the bite," Siegfried Hecker from Stanford University, who revealed in 2010 the existence of a uranium enrichment facility in North Korea, said in Vienna. "All of these things that t ... read more


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