S Korean airlines stay clear of North Korea's airspace after threat
South Korean airlines are rerouting their flights away from North Korean airspace, hours after the North threatened Seoul's passenger planes amid heightened tensions on the divided peninsula.
The move which will cost carriers thousands of dollars on each flight comes a day after Pyongyang warned in state-run media that it cannot guarantee security for South Korean civil airplanes flying near its airspace and accused the US and South Korea of attempting to provoke a nuclear war with the upcoming joint military drills.
It did not say what kind of danger South Korean planes would face or whether the threat meant the North would shoot down planes.
South Korea has urged the North to immediately retract the threat.
"The military threat against civil airplanes' normal flights is a violation of international norms and an inhumane act that cannot be justified under any circumstances," Unification Ministry spokesman Kim Ho-nyeon told reporters.
He indicated the warning may be notice to clear the airspace before a possible missile launch but declined to elaborate.
North Korea announced last week that it is preparing to send a communications satellite into space but regional powers suspect the claim is a cover for the launch of a long-range missile capable of reaching Alaska.
"We plan to make our flight detour through Japanese airspace until the crisis is resolved," said Park Hyun-soo, deputy general manager of Asiana Airlines' operations control centre.
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