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North Korea warns South president

South Korean army soldiers patrol along a barbed-wire fence near the border village of Panmunjom in Paju, South Korea, Tuesday, March 26, 2013

North Korea has hit out at South Korean President Park Geun-hye, a day after she urged Pyongyang to change course and abandon its nuclear goals.

Warning her against "slandering", it told Ms Park to behave with discretion to avoid "horrible disaster".

Ms Park's comments came as she marked three years since the deadly sinking of a South Korean warship.

Overnight, meanwhile, South Korea briefly placed a border military unit on its highest alert.

The alert happened early on Wednesday after a South Korean soldier discovered a "strange object" at the border, military officials said. The alert prepares troops for a possible incursion from North Korea.

The soldier, who was at a military post in Hwacheon, in South Korea's north-eastern Gangwon province, threw a grenade at the object at around 02:30 local time (17:30 GMT), officials said. The alert was lifted at 09:20 local time.

'Lowest ebb'

Tensions are high on the Korean peninsula following multiple threats from North Korea in recent days.

The border incident came hours after North Korea said it had ordered artillery and rocket units into "combat posture" to prepare to target US bases in Hawaii, Guam and the US mainland.

US Pentagon spokesman George Little said that North Korea's threats "followed a pattern designed to raise tensions" and that North Korea would "achieve nothing by these threats".

North Korea has been angered by fresh United Nations sanctions imposed after its nuclear test on 12 February. It also bitterly opposes joint US-South Korea military drills that are currently taking place.

In its latest statement, carried by state-run KCNA news agency, North Korea told Ms Park that its patience was being pushed to the limit.

"She should behave with discretion, clearly mindful that a wrong word may entail horrible disaster at a time when the North-South relations are being pushed to the lowest ebb and the danger of an all-out war is increasing on the Korean Peninsula," it said.

"If she keeps to the road of confrontation like traitor [former president] Lee [Myung-bak], defying the warnings of the DPRK [North Korea], she will meet a miserable ruin."

On Tuesday Ms Park had told the North its only path to survival lay "in stopping provocations and threats, abandoning its nuclear weaponry and missiles".

She spoke in Daejeon, where the 46 sailors who died when the Cheonan warship sank on 26 March 2010 are buried. South Korea says a North Korean torpedo sank the ship; Pyongyang denies any role in the incident.

She has spoken in the past of a desire for more dialogue with North Korea but current tensions are obstructing movements to improve ties.

Late on Tuesday, North Korean state-run media also reported that its top political bureau would soon hold a rare meeting to discuss "an important issue for victoriously advancing the Korean revolution".

It did not specify the issue, or the date of the meeting.

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