North's escalating rhetoric is a strategy to 'minimize internal unrest,' South says Published: 12 Aug. 2024, 18:42 SEO JI-EUN seo.jieun1@joongang.

co.kr North Korean leader Kim Jong-un hugs a child during his visit to a temporary shelter in Uiju County in North Pyongan Province to offer support to flood-damaged areas, in this photo released by the state-run Korean Central News Agency on Aug. 10.

[NEWS1] North Korean leader Kim Jong-un's continued harsh rhetoric against South Korea, labeling it as "filthy scum," appears to be a strategy to quell domestic dissatisfaction amid the widespread flood damage in North Korea, said the South Korean government on Monday. "In an emergency situation where North Korea must mobilize all social resources due to large-scale flood damage, it seems they are redirecting the blame externally to minimize internal unrest," said Koo Byoung-sam, spokesperson for South Korea's Unification Ministry, during a regular briefing on Monday. Observers noted that it is uncommon for North Korea's top leader to directly address South Korean media reports, which are usually inaccessible to the North Korean public.

This unusual move suggests that the regime is deliberately driving anti-South sentiment to prevent public dissatisfaction from being directed toward the North's ruling Workers' Party or Kim himself. During his visit to Uiju County in North Pyongan from Aug. 8 to 9, Kim delivered a speech to flood victims, accusing the South Korean media of "fabricating".