This undated photo provided on Oct 19, 2024 by the North Korean government, shows what it says is a South Korean drone at an undisclosed place in North Korea. (Photo: Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service via AP)

North Korea says it recovered crashed South Korean military drone

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SEOUL: North Korea said on Saturday (Oct 19) it had discovered the remains of a crashed South Korean military drone, suggesting it was on a propaganda mission in the latest confrontation between the two involving cross-border flying objects.

"In light of the drone's shape, the presumptive period of flight, the leaflet-scattering box fixed to the underpart of the drone's fuselage, etc, it is quite likely that the drone is the one which scattered leaflets over the centre of Pyongyang Municipality. But the conclusion has not yet been drawn," said state news agency KCNA.

South Korea's government has declined to say if such drones were flown, and if they were, whether they were flown by its military or civilians. It said to comment on the North's claim would be to get drawn into a ploy.

This undated picture released from North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) via KNS on Oct 19, 2024 shows what is claimed to be a South Korean drone in a tree, found in an area of Pyongyang. (Photo: STR/KCNA VIA KNS/AFP)

"If a violation of the DPRK's territorial ground, air and waters by ROK's military means is discovered and confirmed again, it will be regarded as a grave military provocation against the sovereignty of the DPRK and a declaration of war and an immediate retaliatory attack will be launched," KCNA said.

DPRK is short for the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, North Korea's official name, and ROK stands for Republic of Korea, the South's formal name.

"North Korea's one-sided claims are not worth verifying, nor do they merit a response," South Korea's defence ministry said in a statement.

South Korean lawmaker Yu Yong-weon told Reuters the drones in North Korea's photos are "very similar" to surveillance drones made by South Korean company Sungwoo Engineering and supplied to the South Korean military in 2023.

Sungwoo says on its website it has supplied 100 of its S-Bat drones - which have a maximum flying time of four hours and a top speed of 140kph - to the South Korean military.

Yu said South Korea's drone command ordered the aerial vehicles last year after a North Korean drone entered a no-fly zone surrounding South Korea's presidential office.

Tensions between the Koreas have escalated since the North began flying balloons carrying trash across the border to the South in late May, with Seoul responding by restarting loudspeaker propaganda broadcasts, which anger Pyongyang.

North Korea has intensified its hostile rhetoric in recent days, accusing the South's military of flying drones over its capital on three days this month and threatening "a horrible disaster" if it detects another drone over its skies.

Source: Reuters/gs

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