UPDATE - North Korean regime will 'end' if it uses nuclear weapons, warns S.Korean president
Yoon's latest warning comes after Pyongyang says recent progress in bilateral relations with Russia was its 'sovereign' right- South Korean Constitutional Court strikes down law banning sending leaflets to North Korea
UPDATES DECK, ADDS DETAILS OF SOUTH KOREAN COURT RULING
By Anadolu staff
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol on Tuesday warned that the North Korean regime will be "brought to an end" if it uses nuclear weapons.
Addressing a ceremony at Seoul Air Base observing the 75th Armed Forces Day, Yoon said North Korea should realize that its nuclear weapons will never be able to guarantee its security.
“If North Korea uses nuclear weapons, its regime will be brought to an end by an overwhelming response from the South Korea-US alliance,” Seoul-based Yonhap News quoted Yoon as saying.
The president said that Pyongyang is upgrading its nuclear and missile capabilities despite international community warnings.
Yoon vowed to further strengthen security cooperation with the US and Japan.
The South Korean military will also hold a massive military parade in central Seoul on Tuesday for the first time since 2013, featuring some 4,000 troops and over 170 pieces of military equipment, including K2 battle tanks, the country's new "high-power" missile, and attack drones, according to the agency.
Yoon’s latest statement came after North Korea on Monday said that the recent progress in its bilateral relations with Russia was its “sovereign” right and “foundation for regional stability.”
During his address to the UN General Assembly in New York last week, Yoon said that any arms deal between North Korea and Russia would be tantamount to a “direct provocation” against Seoul.
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un returned to Pyongyang last week after taking a weeklong trip to Russia.
- South Korean court strikes down Inter-Korean Relations Act
The South Korean Constitutional Court on Tuesday struck down the revised Inter-Korean Relations Act, calling it unconstitutional.
In 2021, the then-President Moon Jae-in administration revised the Inter-Korean Relations Act and banned the launching of anti-North Korea leaflets across the border, amid fears that such actions could provoke North Korea and endanger people living near the border.
Under the new law, if anyone violated the government order would be subject to a maximum prison term of three years or a fine of $22,172.
However, the Constitutional Court struck down the law, saying it excessively restricts the constitutionally guaranteed right to freedom of expression, according to Yonhap News.
*Writing by Islamuddin Sajid
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