North Korean official Jang Kum-chol at podium issuing stern warning to South Korea amid drone incursion tensions.
North Korean official Jang Kum-chol at podium issuing stern warning to South Korea amid drone incursion tensions.
Image générée par IA

North Korean official calls Kim Yo-jong's statement clear warning to South Korea

Image générée par IA

A North Korean first vice foreign minister described Kim Yo-jong's statement on South Korea as a 'clear warning,' dismissing Seoul's positive assessment as a 'wishful interpretation.' The remarks by Jang Kum-chol follow President Lee Jae Myung's expression of regret over drone incursions into the North. He urged South Korea to acknowledge its wrongdoing and refrain from approaching North Korea.

Jang Kum-chol, North Korea's first vice foreign minister, issued a statement on Tuesday describing Kim Yo-jong's remarks as a 'clear warning.' He rejected Seoul officials' view of it as an 'unprecedented favorable response' as a 'pipe dream' and 'wishful interpretation.'

Kim Yo-jong, the powerful sister of leader Kim Jong-un, called President Lee Jae Myung 'frank and broad-minded' after his expression of regret over individuals' drone incursions into the North. Jang maintained that South Korea remains North Korea's 'most hostile state,' citing its role in U.N. resolutions condemning Pyongyang's human rights record.

North Korea labeled recent U.N. human rights resolutions a 'grave political provocation' and warned that supporting countries would be held accountable. Presidential chief of staff Kang Hoon-sik said Lee's regret demonstrated a 'strong' will to restore inter-Korean trust and ease peninsula tensions.

Experts noted that Pyongyang's quick response suggests it still values inter-Korean relations despite its hard-line stance, offering cautious hope for progress. Kim Yo-jong referred to Lee as 'president of the Republic of Korea' for the first time since he took office in June last year.

Ce que les gens disent

X discussions frame North Korea's Jang Kum-chol statement as a firm rejection of South Korea's optimistic take on Kim Yo-jong's remarks, labeling Seoul's views 'wishful dream interpretation.' South Korean users mock the government's naivety and criticize President Lee Jae-myung, pro-North accounts highlight sovereignty warnings, and news outlets neutrally report heightened rhetoric.

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President Lee Jae-myung pledged on March 1 to respect North Korea's political system and refrain from hostile actions during a ceremony marking the 107th anniversary of the March First Independence Movement. He emphasized building peace on the Korean Peninsula and vowed to facilitate the resumption of dialogue between the two Koreas and between Pyongyang and Washington. Lee also promised a thorough investigation into recent drone incursions and measures to prevent recurrence.

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Kim Yo-jong, the powerful sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, has been promoted to department head at the ruling Workers' Party of Korea during the ongoing party congress. According to the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), she was previously a vice department director and was reelected as an alternate member of the central committee's political bureau. Seoul's unification ministry is closely watching whether her new role involves handling relations with South Korea or external strategies.

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South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff said North Korea fired multiple ballistic missiles toward the East Sea from the Wonsan area around 8:50 a.m. on Wednesday. It marks back-to-back launches following an unidentified projectile from the Pyongyang area on Tuesday. The tests came after President Lee Jae Myung expressed regret over drone incursions into the North.

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