Quick access to main page (top) Direct access to main contents Quick access to main page (bottom)

North Korea Targets South Korean Property: Power Towers and Golf Clubhouses Destroyed

Daniel Kim Views  

A transmission tower at the Munsan substation in Gyeonggi Province, designed to supply electricity to the Kaesong Industrial Complex\'s Peace Power Station, stands as a reminder of past inter-Korean cooperation. 2016.2.12 / News1
A transmission tower at the Munsan substation in Gyeonggi Province, designed to supply electricity to the Kaesong Industrial Complex’s Peace Power Station, stands as a reminder of past inter-Korean cooperation. 2016.2.12 / News1

Military sources have confirmed the collapse of several transmission towers that South Korea constructed initially to power the Kaesong Industrial Complex in North Korea. The towers’ failure followed North Korea’s dismantling of the power lines in late January, which compromised their structural integrity. Intelligence suggests that North Korea may continue to dismantle the remaining power lines and towers.

As of Tuesday, military officials reported that four out of the 15 transmission towers in North Korean territory had collapsed. This followed North Korean troops’ removal of power lines starting on November 24.

The Korea Electric Power Corporation (KEPCO) installed 48 transmission towers along a 16-kilometer stretch in January 2007, 15 of which were in North Korea. These steel lattice towers were spaced several hundred meters apart and ran from the Gyeongui Line to the Kaesong Industrial Complex, which North Korea demolished on October 15. The towers were part of a system designed to transmit electricity from the Munsan substation in Paju, Gyeonggi Province, to the Peace Substation in Kaesong, which then supplied power to the industrial complex.

The power supply to the Kaesong complex was cut off in February 2016 following North Korea’s fourth nuclear test that year. Power transmission briefly resumed in 2018 with the opening of the inter-Korean liaison office in Kaesong but was halted again in June 2020 when North Korea destroyed the liaison office.

Since the collapse of the second U.S.-North Korea summit in Hanoi in February 2019, North Korea has accelerated the dismantling of South Korean assets. Recent intelligence indicates that even South Korean-developed infrastructure, such as the golf course clubhouse built by the hospitality firm Ananti in the Mount Kumgang tourist area, is being torn down.

Current assessments suggest that most South Korean facilities within the Mount Kumgang tourist zone have been dismantled, with a few exceptions, including the family reunion center built by the South Korean government to facilitate regular reunions for families separated by the Korean War.

A spokesperson for South Korea’s Ministry of Unification said, “We will hold North Korea accountable for these violations of South Korean government and business property rights, even if the process takes time.”

Daniel Kim
content@viewusglobal.com

Comments0

300

Comments0

[ASIA] Latest Stories

  • Six-Hour Martial Law in South Korea: A Flashback to the 1980s Dictatorship Era?
  • North Korea Just Took Down South Korean Power Towers – Here's Why It Matters
  • ‘We Are on the Same Side of Democracy’: Soldier Apologizes Amid Martial Law
  • Helicopters, Special Forces: Inside South Korea’s Martial Law Showdown at the National Assembly
  • Travel Plans Disrupted: Major Nations Issue Travel Warnings After South Korea’s Martial Law
  • Did Yoon Overstep? Emergency Martial Law Move Draws Sharp Criticism from Constitutional Scholars

You May Also Like

  • 1
    Yoon's Martial Law Sparks Crisis with U.S. as Tensions Soar Over Pro-North Korean Crackdown

    LATEST 

  • 2
    President Yoon's Swift Decision: Martial Law to End in Hours Amid Political Crisis

    LATEST 

  • 3
    Emergency Martial Law Declared in South Korea: Yoon Takes Extreme Action to Tackle Political Crisis

    LATEST 

  • 4
    Russia's Top Stealth Drone Shot Down by Its Own Fighter Jet—A Stunning Military Blunder

    DEBATE 

  • 5
    North Korean Troops in Russia Are Getting Killed Off Fast—Here’s Why It’s So Controversial

    DEBATE 

Popular Now

  • 1
    Ukraine’s Army Falling Apart: 60,000 Soldiers Abandon the Front Lines

    DEBATE 

  • 2
    Kim Jong Un’s Possible Russia Visit Sparks Tensions as North Korea-Russia Ties Deepen

    DEBATE 

  • 3
    Taiwan’s President Tells U.S. China’s Military Threats Are No. 1 Concern

    LATEST 

  • 4
    North Korean Bulsae-4 Anti-Tank Missile Destroyed by Ukrainian Drone Strike

    WORLD 

  • 5
    China Outraged as U.S. Plans to Arm Taiwan with F-16 Jets

    LATEST 

Must-Reads

  • 1
    Yoon's Martial Law Sparks Crisis with U.S. as Tensions Soar Over Pro-North Korean Crackdown

    LATEST 

  • 2
    President Yoon's Swift Decision: Martial Law to End in Hours Amid Political Crisis

    LATEST 

  • 3
    Emergency Martial Law Declared in South Korea: Yoon Takes Extreme Action to Tackle Political Crisis

    LATEST 

  • 4
    Russia's Top Stealth Drone Shot Down by Its Own Fighter Jet—A Stunning Military Blunder

    DEBATE 

  • 5
    North Korean Troops in Russia Are Getting Killed Off Fast—Here’s Why It’s So Controversial

    DEBATE 

Popular Now

  • 1
    Ukraine’s Army Falling Apart: 60,000 Soldiers Abandon the Front Lines

    DEBATE 

  • 2
    Kim Jong Un’s Possible Russia Visit Sparks Tensions as North Korea-Russia Ties Deepen

    DEBATE 

  • 3
    Taiwan’s President Tells U.S. China’s Military Threats Are No. 1 Concern

    LATEST 

  • 4
    North Korean Bulsae-4 Anti-Tank Missile Destroyed by Ukrainian Drone Strike

    WORLD 

  • 5
    China Outraged as U.S. Plans to Arm Taiwan with F-16 Jets

    LATEST 

Share it on...