DPRK 'to block border traffic'
The dramatic deterioration in relations came as US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton visited Seoul at the end of a three-nation Asian tour that earlier took her to Japan and China.
Clinton on Wednesday voiced unequivocal support for the ROK in dealing with the sinking of the Cheonan, which Seoul claims was torpedoed by the DPRK, calling Pyongyang's "aggression unacceptable."
At a briefing on Premier Wen Jiabao's upcoming visits to the ROK, Japan, Mongolia and Mynmar, Vice-Foreign Minister Zhang Zhijun said Beijing regards the sinking as "extremely complicated".
"China is carefully and prudently studying and examining the information from all sides," Zhang told reporters at a briefing in Beijing.
He said Beijing was following developments and reiterated China's call for all sides to engage in dialogue and avoid hostile actions that could escalate tensions.
In Seoul, Clinton said during a joint press conference with ROK Foreign Minister Yu Myung-hwan that Washington is considering additional options to hold Pyongyang accountable for the sinking of the 1,200-ton corvette. She did not elaborate on what options are on the table at the moment.
"This was an unacceptable provocation by North Korea (DPRK), and the international community has a responsibility and a duty to respond," Clinton told reporters after talks with ROK leaders.
The DPRK flatly denies it caused the sinking and has warned that retaliation would lead to war.
On Tuesday, Pyongyang announced it was cutting relations with the ROK, starting "all-out counterattacks" against the South's psychological warfare operations and barring ROK ships and airliners from passing through its territory.
On Wednesday, it cut off some cross-border communication links and expelled eight ROK government officials from a joint factory park in the DPRK border city of Kaesong, ROK's Unification Ministry said.
The North's military also issued a statement warning it would "totally ban" the passage of ROK personnel and vehicles to an inter-Korean zone in the western coastal area, apparently referring to Kaesong, if the South does not stop its psychological warfare. It did not mention another border crossing on the eastern side of the peninsula, which remained open.
The statement said it would shoot at and "blow up" any loudspeakers the ROK installs at the border. Seoul dismantled such devices six years ago amid warming ties, but resumed radio broadcasts into the North on Monday and said loudspeakers would be reinstalled within weeks, Kazinform refers to China Daily.
See www.chinadaily.com.cn