North Korea building border ‘wall’, satellite images reveal (2024)

ByJake Horton, Yi Ma & Daniele Palumbo,BBC Verify

North Korea building border ‘wall’, satellite images reveal (1)North Korea building border ‘wall’, satellite images reveal (2)BBC

North Korea is building sections of what appears to be a wall in several places near its border with South Korea, new satellite images reveal.

Images analysed by BBC Verify also back up previous reports from South Korea that land inside the Demilitarised Zone (DMZ) has been cleared, which experts say could be a violation of the long-standing truce between the North and South.

The DMZ is a 4km (2.5 miles) wide buffer zone between North and South Korea, who are still technically at war having never signed a peace treaty. The DMZ is split in two, with each side controlled by the respective nations.

This recent activity is “unusual”, according to experts, and comes at a time of rising tensions between the two countries.

“At this point we can only speculate that North Korea is looking to strengthen its military presence and fortifications along the border,” says Shreyas Reddy, a correspondent at the specialist site NK News, based in Seoul.

BBC Verify commissioned high-resolution satellite imagery of a 7km stretch of the border as part of a project to look at changes North Korea was making to the area.

These images appear to show at least three sections where barriers have been erected near the DMZ, covering a total of about 1km close to the eastern end of the border.

It’s possible that there has been further barrier construction along other stretches of the border.

The exact date construction began is unclear due to a lack of previous high-resolution imagery in the area. However, these structures were not visible in an image captured in November 2023.

“My personal assessment is that this is the first time they've ever built a barrier in the sense of separating places from each other,” Dr Uk Yang, a military and defence expert at Seoul’s Asan Institute for Policy Studies told the BBC.

North Korea building border ‘wall’, satellite images reveal (5)North Korea building border ‘wall’, satellite images reveal (6)

“Back in the 1990s, North Korea had set up the anti-tank walls to deter the advance of tanks in case war broke out. But recently, North Korea has been setting up walls 2-3m high, and they don't look like the anti-tank walls,” Dr Yang says.

“The shape of the walls suggests that they are not just obstacles [for tanks], but are intended to divide an area,” adds Dr Yang, who reviewed the satellite images.

There is also evidence of land clearance within the North Korean side of the DMZ.

North Korea building border ‘wall’, satellite images reveal (7)North Korea building border ‘wall’, satellite images reveal (8)

NK News published analysis based on satellite imagery taken on 4 June which shows a series of locations where land has apparently been cleared within the North Korean-controlled side of the DMZ.

The high-resolution imagery obtained by BBC Verify shows one of these areas in greater detail, including what appears to be a newly created access road.

In drawing the precise northern boundary of the DMZ in the map above, we have adopted the BBC’s research on border mapping. This is because there are slight variations in the available maps of the boundary. However, all the versions we’ve located show the land clearance taking place within the DMZ.

An official from South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said in a recent briefing that the military had identified ongoing activity related to the “reinforcement of tactical roads, the laying of mines and the clearing of wasteland”.

“The land clearing could be intended for both military and non-military aspects”, says Prof Kil Joo Ban of the Ilmin International Relations Institute, Korea University.

"It allows observatory posts to be easily established," he says "for North Korea to monitor military activities in South Korea" and to spot "defectors who attempt to cross the border to South Korea."

North Korea building border ‘wall’, satellite images reveal (9)North Korea building border ‘wall’, satellite images reveal (10)Getty

“It is unusual to build structures in the DMZ and may be a violation of the armistice without prior consultation,” according to Prof Victor Cha, the senior vice president for Asia and Korea at at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies.

The Korean War ended in 1953 with an armistice, in which both sides pledged not to "execute any hostile act within, from, or against the demilitarised zone”. But there was no final peace settlement.

While reunification has seemed unlikely for years, this had always been the stated goal of North Korean leaders until the start of 2024, when Kim Jong Un announced that his country would no longer pursue that ambition.

Some experts called the remarks “unprecedented” and saw a significant policy change when Mr Kim labelled South Korea as a "principal enemy" at the beginning of this year.

Since then, the North has also started to remove symbols representing the unity of the two countries - such as demolishing monuments and erasing references to reunification on government websites.

“North Korea doesn’t really need more barriers to prevent a strike from the South but by erecting these border barriers, the North is signalling that it doesn’t seek reunification,” says Dr Ramon Pacheco Pardo, head of European and International Studies at Kings College London.

Some experts also say this aligns with Mr Kim’s broader actions.

“North Korea is not even pretending to want to negotiate with the United States or South Korea, and has rebuffed the recent attempts by Japan to engage in talks,” says Dr Edward Howell, Korean Peninsula researcher at Oxford.

“With North Korea’s warming relations with Russia, we should not be surprised if inter-Korean provocations increase this year.”

Clarification 24 June: This story has been amended to reflect previous reporting of border land clearance by NK News.

North Korea building border ‘wall’, satellite images reveal (11)North Korea building border ‘wall’, satellite images reveal (12)

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North Korea–South Korea relations

North Korea

North Korea building border ‘wall’, satellite images reveal (2024)

FAQs

Is there a wall separating North and South Korea? ›

The Korean Demilitarized Zone is a 250-km-long and 4-km-wide demilitarised line of demarcation separating North and South Korea. It was constructed along the 38th Parallel after the 1953 cease-fire that halted the Korean War.

Can you guess 3 border countries of North Korea? ›

North Korea has an area of 120,538 km², of which 120,408 km² is land and 130 km² is water. It has 1,671.5 kilometres (1,038.6 mi) of land boundaries; of these, 1,416 kilometres (880 mi) are with China, 238 kilometres (148 mi) are with South Korea, and 17.5 kilometres (10.9 mi) are with Russia.

What is the dividing line boundary that separates North Korea from South Korea as of today? ›

The DMZ, which runs for about 150 miles (240 km), constitutes the 1953 military cease-fire line and roughly follows latitude 38° N (the 38th parallel) from the mouth of the Han River on the west coast of the Korean peninsula to a little south of the North Korean town of Kosŏng on the east coast.

How was the North South Korea border determined? ›

38th parallel, popular name given to latitude 38° N that in East Asia roughly demarcates North Korea and South Korea. The line was chosen by U.S. military planners at the Potsdam Conference (July 1945) near the end of World War II as an army boundary, north of which the U.S.S.R.

What is the purpose of the North Korean wall? ›

North Korean side of the DMZ

Electric fences are used in the Korean Demilitarized Zone as a means to seal off North Korea from South Korea. Behind the fence, there is a strip which has land mines hidden beneath it. The North Korean side of the DMZ primarily serves to stop an invasion of North Korea from the south.

Does anyone live in the DMZ? ›

Location. Daeseong-dong belongs administratively to Josan-ri, Gunnae-myeon, in Paju. It is the only civilian habitation within the southern portion of the DMZ.

How many miles long is the DMZ? ›

The DMZ is about 160 miles long and approximately 2.5 miles wide. The truce that ended hostilities was signed here in 1953, but, as an official peace treaty was never agreed to, the two sides have still officially been at war for over sixty years.

What was the former name of Korea when both countries were united? ›

It was mainly 조선 (Joseon), and this is what North Korea still uses. It was the Joseon Dynasty, and the Joseon province of the Japan Empire next, and then the Korean peninsula under the force of the U.S. military, and since the next is Daehanminguk (South Korea) and Joseon Minjujuui Inmin Gonghwaguk (North Korea).

Can you see North Korea from South Korea? ›

On a half-day tour in the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ), you can see North Korea from the Dora Observatory rooftop and explore a secret infiltration tunnel built by North Korea, while gaining insight into the history and legacy of the Korean War.

What is the most heavily guarded border in the world? ›

On the opposite extreme, the Korean Demilitarized Zone—the border between communist North Korea and democratic South Korea—is the most heavily militarized border in the world.

What is the no man's land between North and South Korea? ›

The tiny village of Taesung sits deep in the heart of Korea's Demilitarised Zone – the strip of no-man's land separating North and South Korea. The community of South Koreans, many in their 80s and 90s, live mere metres from North Korea, meaning they must be guarded day and night by hundreds of soldiers.

Are there tunnels between North and South Korea? ›

The Third Tunnel of Aggression (Korean: 제3땅굴; Third Infiltration Tunnel or 3rd Tunnel) is one of four known tunnels under the border between North Korea and South Korea, extending south of Panmunjom.

How is North and South Korea separated? ›

Closeup of the Korean Demilitarized Zone that surrounds the Military Demarcation Line The Korean Peninsula was divided along the 38th parallel north from 1945 until 1950 and along the Military Demarcation Line from 1953 to present.

Is there still a border between North and South Korea? ›

The two Koreas are now separated by the 2.5-mile-wide DMZ, where nature has flourished as its fields and forests have gone largely untouched for decades. “These two countries are de facto still at war, and so anything can happen,” Meli said.

Is there still tension between North and South Korea? ›

Tensions erupted into the Korean War, which lasted from 1950 to 1953. When the war ended, both countries were devastated, but the division remained. North and South Korea continued a military standoff, with periodic clashes. The conflict survived the end of the Cold War and is still ongoing.

Is it possible to unite North and South Korea? ›

He stated "the party's comprehensive conclusion after reviewing decades-long inter-Korean relations is that reunification can never be achieved with those ROK riffraffs that defined the 'unification by absorption' and 'unification under liberal democracy' as their state policy", which he said is in "sharp contradiction ...

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