Thursday's
incident came amid heightened tensions following mine blasts that
maimed two members of a South Korean border patrol earlier this month
and the launch this week of a major South Korea-US military exercise
that infuriated Pyongyang.
A defence ministry spokesman said South
Korea had detected a rocket fired from the North Korean side across a
western section of the border shortly before 4:00pm (0700 GMT)."It landed on our side, but struck no military target," the spokesman told AFP, adding there were no apparent casualties or damage.
South Korean military units retaliated by launching "dozens of rounds of 155mm shells" targeting the rocket launch site, the ministry said in a statement.
"We have strengthened our military readiness and are closely watching movements of the North's military," it added.
The spokesman said South Korean troops had been placed on highest-level alert, while President Park Geun-Hye reportedly called and chaired an emergency meeting of her National Security Council.
-- Local residents evacuated --
A
local government official in Yeoncheon county -- some 60 kilometres
north of Seoul -- told AFP that residents of several border villages had
been ordered to evacuate their homes for nearby shelters.
Dan
Pinkston, Korea expert at the International Crisis Group in Seoul, said
the motive for the initial North Korean rocket firing was unclear.
"It
could always have been an error, but more likely it was the show of
displeasure that the North has been threatening for a while now,"
Pinkston said.The incident will fuel tensions that have been on high simmer in recent weeks following the border landmine incident.
Seoul said the mines were placed by North Korea and responded by resuming high-decibel propaganda broadcasts across the border, using loudspeakers that had lain silent for more than a decade.
The
North denied any role and threatened "indiscriminate" shelling of the
loudspeaker units unless they halted their broadcasts immediately.
It
also threatened retaliatory strikes after Seoul and Washington refused
to call off their annual Ulchi Freedom military drill, which kicked off
Monday and roleplays responses to an invasion by the nuclear-armed
North.
North Korea regularly
ups its bellicose rhetoric before and during the annual joint
exercises, but rarely follows through on its threats.
In the past, its default response has been to test fire missiles into the East Sea (Sea of Japan).-- Risk of escalation --
"Sending a rocket over the border is surprising, because the inherent risks are just so big," Pinkston said.
"If
it had hit something strategic or caused any casualties, the South's
response would have been far stronger, and then suddenly we're on the
path towards a serious confrontation," he added.
The
last direct attack on the South was in November 2010 when North Korea
shelled the South Korean border island of Yeonpyeong, killing two
civilians and two soldiers.
On that occasion, South Korea responded by shelling North Korean positions, triggering brief fears of a full-scale conflict.
In
October last year, North Korea border guards attempted to shoot down
some helium balloons launched across the land border by activists and
carrying thousands of anti-North leaflets.
The incident triggered a brief exchange of heavy machine-gun fire and scuppered a planned resumption of high-level talks.
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