S. Korea activist sends ‘The Interview’ DVDs into North

RANDALL Park (center) as North Korean despot Kim Jong-un “The Interview”

American actor Randall Park (center) portrays North Korean leader Kim Jong-un in the 2014 film “The Interview.” AP

SEOUL, South Korea—A South Korean activist said on Thursday he had launched thousands of copies of the Hollywood film “The Interview” into North Korea by balloon, after police blocked a previous attempt last week.

The unpublicized launch was carried out around midnight on Wednesday in Gimpo, close to the western tip of the heavily fortified border, defector-turned-activist Park Sang-hak said.

The balloons were carrying hundreds of thousands of anti-Pyongyang leaflets as well as 5,000 DVDs and 5,000 USB ports containing copies of the movie about a fictional CIA plot to assassinate North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.

Pyongyang has slammed the Seth Rogen comedy as a “wanton act of terror” and threatened dire consequences if any attempt is made to distribute the film in the North.

READ: Movie world fears for freedom of speech after cancellation of ‘The Interview’

“From now I will carry out balloon-launches more often but in a quiet way,” said Park, who was blocked from approaching the border by police during a similar ballon-launch operation last week.

North Korea has long condemned the cross-border launches and demanded that South Korea step in to prevent them.

Last October North Korea border guards attempted to shoot down some balloons, triggering a brief exchange of heavy machine gun fire between the two sides.

While appealing to activists to avoid provoking the North, Seoul insists their actions are protected by freedom of expression principles.

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