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South Korea Turns Off Speakers Blasting K-Pop Into North Korea

South Korea Turns Off Speakers Blasting K-Pop Into North Korea

South Korea on Wednesday switched off loudspeakers that had been broadcasting K-pop songs, news and other propaganda into North Korea for the past year — one of the first concrete steps taken by the​ newly elected ​leader, Lee Jae-myung​, to improve inter-Korean ties.
​Mr. Lee ordered his military to turn off the high-powered loudspeakers on Wednesday afternoon to 'help restore trust in South-North Korean relations and build peace on the Korean Peninsula,' said Kang Yu-jung, Mr. Lee's spokeswoman.
Inter-Korean relations plunged to their lowest point in many years under Mr. Lee's impeached predecessor, Yoon Suk Yeol, as the countries escalated a tit-for-tat exchange across the border. Mr. Yoon supported the idea of spreading outside information into the isolated North. He allowed activists in ​the South — most​ of them defectors from the North — to launch large balloons loaded with propaganda leaflets that contained news​ and bitter criticism of the North's leader, Kim Jong-un​, calling him 'a ​bloodthirsty dictator' or 'pig​.'
North Korea bristled at the balloons and retaliated last year by sending balloons loaded with cigarette butts and other trash into the South. ​
Mr. Yoon's government responded by turning on its propaganda loudspeakers a year ago, bombarding North Korean soldiers and villagers along the border with K-pop music and news. The North amped up its own loudspeakers​, broadcast​ing eerie noises that South Korean villagers​ on the border found so irritable that ​they installed double-pane windows ​and other sound insulation at home.
By switching off its loudspeakers first on Wednesday, Mr. Lee's government essentially proposed a cease-fire in the loudspeaker war. South Korean military officials said on Wednesday that they were monitoring the border to see if the North would reciprocate by turning off its loudspeakers.
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