North Korea accuses South of using drones for politics

This handout photo taken on April 11, 2014 and released by South Korean Defence Ministry shows wreckage of three unmanned aerial vehicles found in three different places, including Baengnyeong island near the rivals' disputed sea border, at the Agenc
This handout photo taken on April 11, 2014 and released by South Korean Defence Ministry shows wreckage of three unmanned aerial vehicles found in three different places, including Baengnyeong island near the rivals' disputed sea border, at the Agency for Defense Development in Daejeon, south of Seoul. North Korea accused South Korea on Sunday, May 11, 2014, of fabricating a story about crashed spy drones in order to divert attention from its ferry disaster. -- FILE PHOTO: AFP

SEOUL (AFP) - North Korea accused South Korea Sunday of fabricating a story about crashed spy drones in order to divert attention from its ferry disaster.

The drones were recovered in three different locations in the South between March 24 and April 6.

The South's defence ministry last week called them "a clear military provocation" and said it had "smoking gun" proof that they had all been flown from North Korea.

On Sunday, the North, repeating previous denials, said it has nothing to do with the drones "no matter how frequently the South Korean authorities cook up stories".

"The Park Geun Hye group foolishly seeks to find a way out of the worst ruling crisis," an inspection group from the North's powerful National Defence Commission (NDC) said in a statement referring to the South's President.

The April 16 ferry sinking which killed more than 300 people is one of South Korea's worst peacetime disasters, made all the more shocking by the loss of many young lives.

Victims' families have been extremely critical of the government over the disaster, as more evidence emerges of lax safety standards and possible corruption among state regulators.

"It is the inveterate bad habit of the South Korean authorities to seek a way out by fabricating shocking cases and linking them with the North whenever they are driven into a crisis," the NDC group said.

The South's defence ministry said last week a joint investigation with US experts showed the drones had been flown from different locations and pre-programmed to fly over South Korean military installations before returning to the North.

North Korea displayed a set of what looked like very basic drones during a huge military parade in Pyongyang last July.

And in March last year, state media reported leader Kim Jong Un overseeing a military drill using "super-precision drone planes".

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