North Korea blows up parts of inter-Korean road on its side of border, South says

North Korea blows up parts of inter-Korean road on its side of border, South says North Korea blows up parts of inter-Korean road on its side of border, South says

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea has blown up sections of an inter-Korean road on its side of the heavily militarized border between the two Koreas, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said Tuesday.

At around midday, some parts of the road north of the milit demarcation line dividing the countries were blown up, the Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a message sent to media.

A mound of dirt is piled up near a structure on the road of the Gyeongui Line in the northern area of the Demilitarized Zone, separating the two Koreas, in this picture taken from Paju, South Korea, on Monday.Yonhap / via

South Korea’s milit had ramped up surveillance and its readiness in response, it said. Seoul had warned on Monday that Pyongyang was getting ready to blow up the roads.

Tensions on the Korean Peninsula have been increasing amid an escalating war of words after the North accused its rival of sending drones over the country’s capital, Pyongyang.

North Korea said Friday that the drones had scattered a “huge number” of anti-North leaflets over the city, in what it called political and milit provocation that could lead to armed conflict.

A spokesman for the South’s Joint Chiefs of Staff declined on Monday to answer questions over whether the South Korean milit or civilians had flown the alleged drones.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un had overseen on Monday a meeting with defense and security officials to discuss how to respond to the “enemy’s serious provocation that violated the sovereignty of the DPRK,” state news agency KCNA reported. DPRK is short for the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, North Korea’s official name.