South Korea fired warning shots today after North Korean soldiers briefly crossed into its side of their heavily defended border, adding to mounting tension after Pyongyang said this week it planned a nuclear test.
The skirmish follows demands by the UN Security Council the yesterday for North Korea not to carry out the test, warning of unspecified consequences.
"Our troops fired warning shots at the five North Korean soldiers after they climbed over the military demarcation line despite several loudspeaker warnings," South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement.
It said North Koreans went about 30 yards across the line within the demilitarised zone (DMZ), the last frontier of the Cold War. The North Korean soldiers did not return fire and none was reported injured in the incident.
"It seems the North intended to raise tensions after their announcement on October 3 of a plan to conduct a nuclear test," Yonhap news agency quoted a South Korean military source saying.
In late May, two North Koreans crossed the military line but also retreated after South Korean guards fired warning shots.
North Korea stations most of its 1.2-million-strong army near the DMZ, a 2.5-mile strip that has divided the two since the end of the 1950-53 Korean War for which a formal peace treaty has never been agreed.
South Korea stations a large part of its nearly 700,000 troops near the border, backed by around 30,000 US troops.
North Korea announced the planned test last Wednesday, saying it had no choice in the face of what it said was a US threat of nuclear war and economic sanctions.
There has been speculation the reclusive state might detonate a device this weekend, and a Chinese source said Pyongyang planned to carry out the test deep inside an abandoned mine.