0 like 0 dislike
in General Factchecking by Novice (630 points)
North Korea blew up sections of inter-Korean roads and rail lines on its side of the heavily fortified border between the two Koreas on Tuesday, prompting South Korea's military to fire warning shots.

3 Answers

0 like 0 dislike
by Novice (920 points)
selected by
 
Best answer

Yes this is true. In the article provided Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) it shares that North Korea had blown up sections of the inter-Korean roads and rail lines to fortify a the border between North and South Korea. I was able to find another article from the National Broadcasting Company (NBC) that not only gives a written understanding of what had happened on October 15th but also shares a video as another piece of factual evidence. Both articles do a fantastic job at keeping all information non biased and provide some kind of factual evidence wether it is a video, photo, or some kind of interview quote. 

True
0 like 0 dislike
by Apprentice (1.3k points)

This is correct. This particular article from CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Company) references a Reuters article (Reuters) which was originally pulled from an Associated Press article. (AP). The Associated Press referenced the South Korean Government for their article, specifically the Ministry of Defence and Reunification.

0 like 0 dislike
by Newbie (300 points)
Yes this is true. The CBC is one of Canada's most viewed and trusted websites and I have found many other reputable news sources from CNN, NBC, Reuters, and the Associated Press. The AP corroborates the CBC article and references South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff and the ministry of unification as did the CBC article.
True
by Novice (980 points)
0 0
Although reputable sources are referenced in confirming the claim, there could definitely be more details added into why the claim is correct. Although South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff is mentioned, what do they say that confirms the claim is true. By incorporating these details and direct links, it will provide more support to the answer.

Community Rules


Be respectful.

There is bound to be disagreement on a site about misinformation. Assume best intentions on everyone's part.

If you are new to factchecking, take some time to learn about it. "How to Factcheck" has some resources for getting started. Even if you disagree with these materials, they'll help you understand the language of this community better.

News Detective is for uncovering misinformation and rumors. This is not a general interest question-answer site for things someone could Google.

Posting

The title is the "main claim" that you're trying to factcheck.

Example:
Factcheck This: Birds don't exist

If possible, LINK TO to the place you saw the claim.

Answering

LINK TO YOUR EVIDENCE or otherwise explain the source ("I called this person, I found it in this book, etc.")

But don't just drop a link. Give an explanation, copy and paste the relevant information, etc.

News Detective is not responsible for anything anyone posts on the platform.
...