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When Sparking South Korean Christmas Lights Become Flipping Pyongyang 'The Bird'

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South Korea Christmas Tree

A South Korean church plans to display Christmas lights near the border with North Korea, military officials said Thursday, despite concerns about a violent response from Pyongyang.

A Presbyterian church in Seoul will set up the giant display on a tree-shaped steel tower near the heavily-fortified border, the defence ministry said.

The Christmas lights on a military-controlled hill in Gimpo west of Seoul will be switched on for 12 days from December 22, it said.

Last month a different church group shelved its plans for a similar display after local residents voiced fears that Pyongyang might shell the illuminations.

Before the South's "Sunshine Policy" of engagement with North Korea launched in 1998, the seasonal lighting displays were common.

Pyongyang repeatedly condemned them as "psychological warfare" aimed at spreading Christianity.

In 2004 the two Koreas agreed to halt official-level cross-border propaganda and the South stopped the Christmas border illuminations completely.

They were resumed in 2010 after North Korea shelled a frontline island, but were postponed last year in a conciliatory gesture following the death of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il.

Tensions have been running high on the Korean peninsula after the North's rocket launch last week.

SEE ALSO: Creepy pictures from the hidden 5th floor of a North Korean hotel >

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