The issue has emerged as a major variable in inter-Korean relations, as North Korea has raised the possibility of a 9/19 military agreement and demanded that South Koreans prevent North Korean defectors from spreading North Korean flyers.

The government is committed to making a breakthrough in stagnant inter-Korean relations, but rather than responding to it, North Korea seems to press the South with the issue of a North Korean flyer.

Kim Young-eun, the younger sister of the chairman of the State Council Chairman Kim Yeo-jung, the first vice-president of the Labor Party, said today (4th) that the North and South Korea joint offices were closed and the North Korean military alliance was destroyed and the Kaesong Industrial Complex was completely dismantled.

The Kaesong Industrial Complex has been suspended for a long time, but the South-North Contact Office and the South-North Korea Military Cooperation Agreement can be a significant pressure as the Moon Jae-in government is confident of the best results of inter-Korean relations.

Moreover, the'Stop of Delivery' is a situation that the government cannot stand still in that it is an agreement between the two Koreas on the April 27, 2018 Declaration of Panmunjom.

In Article 2, Paragraph 1 of the Panmunjom Declaration, agreed by the North and South Korean leaders,'It is to stop all hostilities, including loudspeaker broadcasting and distributing flyers, and abolish the means' in the Military Demarcation Line.

The government said it was considering a plan to immediately prevent the dissemination of North Korea's flyers to the law by the first vice president, Kim Yeo-jung.

It is believed that Kim Yeo-jung, the first vice-president, asked in the discourse to "make a law to stop the clown."

First, a spokesman for the Ministry of Unification said at a regular briefing today, “The government is already considering ways to improve the effective system that can fundamentally relieve tensions in border areas.”

This suggests that regardless of the discourse of the First Vice-President Kim, he has already reviewed relevant laws and regulations.

The government seems to be considering ways to restrict the spreading of North Korea's flyers into law because of the lives and safety of the bordering residents.

However, this issue belongs to'Freedom of Expression,' and controversy is unavoidable in the process of legislative implementation.

In 2018, an amendment to the Inter-Korean Exchange and Cooperation Act was proposed that would require approval by the Minister of Unification in advance when spraying the North Korea Flyer, but was not passed.

The government also mobilized police forces to protect South Koreans as a pretext to protect the South Koreans from warning and publicly spreading North Korea.

This is because in October 2014, a North Korean refugee group fired an anti-aircraft gun at a balloon in North Korea that flew from Yeoncheon, Gyeonggi-do, and the military responded.

This is why a spokeswoman for the woman said today that it is "an act that poses a danger to the lives and property of the people in the border region" for spraying North Korea.

Therefore, while the government is pursuing a law to prevent the spread of North Korea, it is predicted that it is highly likely to mobilize the police until then.

Yang Moo-jin, a professor at North Korea University, said, "Under the current law, it is not possible to prohibit the spread of leaflets by law, but we will be able to restrain them through social safety-related laws such as police enforcement."

However, even in this case, there is a limitation that it cannot be prevented if the shear is sprayed without prior notice.

On the other hand, some point out that North Korea consistently silently violates their 9/19 military agreement and demands that they comply only when necessary.

The Ministry of National Defense protested to the North in November last year that it was a violation of the September 19th Military Agreement on the North Korean military's South Korean surveillance post (GP) shooting and the shooting of coastal artillery at Changrin Island, a border between North and South Korea, but North Korea did not respond.