Asia –
North Korea jams GPS signals in South Korea
Several ships and dozens of civilian planes suffered “some operational disruptions” in South Korea on Friday and Saturday.
Published today at 5:02 a.m.
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North Korea has been carrying out a GPS signal jamming campaign since Friday that has affected several boats and dozens of civilian planes in South Korea, the South Korean army said on Saturday.
“North Korea carried out provocative GPS jamming from Haeju and Kaesong yesterday (Friday) and today (Saturday),” Seoul’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement, adding that ships and dozens of civil aircraft suffered “some operational disruptions”.
Call for caution
The military urged caution for South Korean civilian boats and planes traveling on and above the Yellow Sea between China and the Korean Peninsula. “We strongly urge North Korea to immediately cease its GPS provocations and warn that it will be held responsible for any resulting problems,” the military continued.
GPS jamming consists of emitting unknown signals which saturate GPS receivers and render them unusable for navigation. South Korea has accused North Korea numerous times in recent years of carrying out this type of nuisance from its territory.
Since last May, Pyongyang has also sent thousands of balloons carrying garbage to South Korea. Some of these balloons disrupted traffic at Incheon International Airport, located northwest of Seoul, about 40 kilometers from North Korea.
Test firing
These announcements come a few days after a test firing by Pyongyang of an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) presented by the regime as the most advanced in its arsenal.
The launch, hours before the US presidential election on Tuesday, represented North Korea’s first weapons test since it was accused of sending troops to Russia to support its war effort in Ukraine.
South Korea responded Friday by firing a ballistic missile into the sea with the aim of showing its “strong determination” to respond to “any North Korean provocation.”
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