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NewsFebruary 12, 2016

PAJU, South Korea -- South Korea has cut off power and water supplies to a factory park in North Korea, officials said Friday, a day after the North deported all South Korean workers there and ordered a military takeover of the complex that had been the last major symbol of cooperation between the rivals...

By JINMAN LEE ~ Associated Press
South Korean Army soldiers move barricades to close the road Thursday at the customs, immigration and quarantine office near the border village of Panmunjom in Paju, South Korea.
South Korean Army soldiers move barricades to close the road Thursday at the customs, immigration and quarantine office near the border village of Panmunjom in Paju, South Korea.Ahn Young-joon ~ Associated Press

PAJU, South Korea -- South Korea has cut off power and water supplies to a factory park in North Korea, officials said Friday, a day after the North deported all South Korean workers there and ordered a military takeover of the complex that had been the last major symbol of cooperation between the rivals.

It is the latest in an escalating standoff over North Korea's recent rocket launch that Seoul, Washington and their allies view as a banned test of missile technology.

The North says its actions on the Kaesong complex were a response to Seoul's earlier decision to suspend operations as punishment for the launch.

On Thursday night, the 280 South Korean workers who had been at the park crossed the border into South Korea, several hours after a deadline set by the North passed.

Their departure quashed concerns some might be held hostage and lowered the chances the standoff might lead to violence or miscalculations.

But they weren't allowed to bring back any finished products and equipment at their factories because the North announced it will freeze all South Korean assets there.

The North also said it was closing an inter-Korean highway linking to Kaesong and shutting down two cross-border communication hotlines.

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"I was told not to bring anything but personal goods, so I've got nothing but my clothes to take back," a manager at a South Korean apparel company at the complex, who declined to give his name, said by phone before he crossed to the South.

Chang Beom Kang, who has been running an apparel company in Kaesong since 2009, said from South Korea his company has about 920 North Korean workers -- who didn't show up Thursday -- and seven South Korean managers at Kaesong.

He said one of his workers, who entered Kaesong earlier Thursday, was about to cross the border to return to South Korea with thousands of women's clothes produced at the factory. But at the last minute, the employee had to drive back to the factory to unload the clothes because of North Korea's announcement it would freeze all South Korean assets there.

"I'm devastated now," Kang said by phone, saying he's worried about losing credibility with clients because of the crisis.

Seoul's Unification Ministry said in a statement today it had stopped power transmissions to the factory park. Ministry officials said the suspension led to a halt of water supplies to Kaesong.

Tensions on the Korean Peninsula have risen since North Korea carried out a nuclear test last month, followed by the long-range rocket launch Sunday that came after Seoul had warned of serious consequences.

In one of its harshest possible punishment options, South Korea on Thursday began work to suspend operations at the factory park.

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