SEOUL 鈥 North Korea appears to have released water from a dam near its border with South Korea, prompting vacationers in the neighboring country to evacuate over rising water levels on the Imjin River, officials said on Tuesday.
The water level at a bridge at the river in the South鈥檚 border county of Yeoncheon surpassed 1 metre on Monday afternoon, requiring visitors on the riverbank to evacuate, government data showed.
鈥淣orth Korea appears to have released water from its Hwanggang dam,鈥 an official at South Korea鈥檚 unification ministry handling inter-Korean affairs told Reuters.
The Yeoncheon county said it sent alarm messages to nearby residents and issued warnings to move to a safe area.
It was not immediately clear how many people had to leave after the suspected water release.
鈥淭he water level is now decreasing after hovering over 1.6 meters,鈥 a Yeoncheon county official said.
North Korea has been stepping up efforts to prevent flood damage from recent heavy rains.
South Korea has repeatedly urged the North to give notice before releasing water from the dam, as the river flows through Yeoncheon, but Pyongyang has remained unresponsive.
Release of water from the dam in 2009 resulted in flooding downstream that killed six South Koreans.
RELATED STORIES
Thousands evacuate in S. Korea as heavy rains trigger flood, landslides
Water crisis fans calls for transparency in dam, other China-funded projects