产品展示
  • 汽车行李网挂环挂钩通用多功能车内用车载后备箱网兜固定安装配件
  • 致青春汽车贴纸拉花引擎盖车门机盖贴纸刮痕车头盖个性贴
  • 名爵ZS专用汽车内饰仪表台防晒避光垫防滑遮阳汽车专用品配件改装
  • 请系好安全带禁止吸烟汽车贴纸车内警示提示带随意创意装饰车贴纸
  • 骆驼蓄电池95D31适用于瑞风普拉多帕杰罗85AH汽车电瓶 以旧换新
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

汽车配件

Seoul High Court calls off defector group's license repeal over anti

2024-06-07 00:14:34      点击:376

An activist prepares to launch balloons containing anti-North Korea propaganda leaflets at Imjingak Pavilion in Paju, Gyeonggi Province, in this April 2016 file photo. Korea Times file

The Seoul High court on Friday ordered the government to reverse its decision to revoke the license of a North Korean defectors' group for sending anti-Pyongyang propaganda leaflets over to the North.

The court ruling came after the unification ministry revoked the license of Fighters for a Free North Korea, after it sent plastic balloons carrying some 500,000 anti-North propaganda flyers northward, in defiance of the government's ban on such activities in 2020.

The defector group filed a lawsuit to reverse the ministry's decision, but the district and appeals courts both sided with the government, saying the anti-North leafleting "goes against the public interest."

However, the Supreme Court struck down the two previous rulings and sent the case back to the high court for retrial in April.

In South Korea, North Korean defector groups, like Fighters for a Free North Korea, send big plastic balloons carrying leaflets over to the North in what they say is a bid to free North Korean people from the tyrannical North Korean regime with outside information.

In 2021, a revision to the Development of Inter-Korean Relations Act went into force during the previous Moon Jae-in administration to prohibit the launching of anti-Pyongyang leaflets across the border on the grounds that such leafleting could provoke the North to undertake bellicose acts.

But in September this year, the Constitutional Court struck down the ban, citing freedom of expression. (Yonhap)

N. Korean official lambasts US over sanctions: state media
N. Korea gets cold shoulder at ARF