N.K. ups tension with short
North Korea fired several short-range missiles towards the East Sea on Thursday, in an apparent protest against the United Nations’ adoption of a series of harshest-ever sanctions, the Defense Ministry said.
The military provocation also came hours after President Park Geun-hye issued tough remarks against the communist regime, pledging to deter its “tyranny.”
“The North Korean military fired six short-range projectiles from Wonsan, Gangwon Province, at around 10:00 a.m. today,” ministry spokesperson Moon Sang-gyun said in a press briefing.
“The detailed type of the launched vehicles are currently under examination.”
The projectiles in question, which allegedly fell into the sea after flying some 100-150 kilometers, are suspected to be short-range KN-01 missiles, with or without 300 mm-caliber rockets, according to officials.
“The military is on sharp lookout for any further movements by North Korea,” said the Joint Chiefs of Staff in a statement.
North Korea’s armed protest -- marking its third this year following the nuclear test on Jan. 6 and long-range missile launch on Feb. 7 -- comes in the wake of the U.N. Security Council’s adoption of a drastic resolution to punish Pyongyang for its defiant actions.
The unanimously-approved Resolution 2270 visibly stepped up restrictions on the communist nation, including mandatory inspection of all cargo moving across its borders and bans on its exports of key mineral resources.
Oh Joon, South Korea’s ambassador to the international organization, directly addressed North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, right after the resolution was passed.
“As a member of the Korean people, I request the North Korean ruler to put an end (to nuclear development),” Oh added in Korean at the end of his speech.
“(South) Korea has no nuclear weapons. You have been imagining (military threats) that are non-existent.”
Seoul, which had been seeking to add pressure upon its hostile neighbor, welcomed the resolution.
“We will continue to cooperate with the international society so that the North Korean regime may renounce its reckless nuclear development and cease its tyrannical rule,” the president said at breakfast meeting hosted by the Christian Council of Korea.
This is the most direct and vigorous term that the South Korean leader has used against the North Korean regime or its ruler Kim Jong-un.
The president’s repeated pledge to apply diplomatic leverage upon the North was backed by a series of restrictive bills passed by the National Assembly late on Wednesday.
The list of bills included the antiterrorism bill and the North Korean human rights bill, the former expanding the power of the nation’s spy agency to monitor potential terror suspects and the latter allowing the government to investigate into Pyongyang’s human rights abuses.
The Seoul government also remained cautious in its stance on whether to proceed with a trilateral logistics project involving the two Koreas and Russia.
The “Rajin-Khasan logistics project” envisions the delivery of Russian coal into South Korea through the North Korean port city of Rajin. South Korean companies that have joined the project have conducted three test drives since 2014.
Further consultations have been suspended since the Feb. 7 rocket launch.
The South Korean Unification Ministry said it will consider various factors before making the decision. Russia’s foreign ministry said Wednesday that the project would not be affected by the new U.N. sanctions.
By Bae Hyun-jung (tellme@heraldcorp.com)
The military provocation also came hours after President Park Geun-hye issued tough remarks against the communist regime, pledging to deter its “tyranny.”
“The North Korean military fired six short-range projectiles from Wonsan, Gangwon Province, at around 10:00 a.m. today,” ministry spokesperson Moon Sang-gyun said in a press briefing.
“The detailed type of the launched vehicles are currently under examination.”
The projectiles in question, which allegedly fell into the sea after flying some 100-150 kilometers, are suspected to be short-range KN-01 missiles, with or without 300 mm-caliber rockets, according to officials.
“The military is on sharp lookout for any further movements by North Korea,” said the Joint Chiefs of Staff in a statement.
North Korea’s armed protest -- marking its third this year following the nuclear test on Jan. 6 and long-range missile launch on Feb. 7 -- comes in the wake of the U.N. Security Council’s adoption of a drastic resolution to punish Pyongyang for its defiant actions.
The unanimously-approved Resolution 2270 visibly stepped up restrictions on the communist nation, including mandatory inspection of all cargo moving across its borders and bans on its exports of key mineral resources.
Oh Joon, South Korea’s ambassador to the international organization, directly addressed North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, right after the resolution was passed.
“As a member of the Korean people, I request the North Korean ruler to put an end (to nuclear development),” Oh added in Korean at the end of his speech.
“(South) Korea has no nuclear weapons. You have been imagining (military threats) that are non-existent.”
Seoul, which had been seeking to add pressure upon its hostile neighbor, welcomed the resolution.
“We will continue to cooperate with the international society so that the North Korean regime may renounce its reckless nuclear development and cease its tyrannical rule,” the president said at breakfast meeting hosted by the Christian Council of Korea.
This is the most direct and vigorous term that the South Korean leader has used against the North Korean regime or its ruler Kim Jong-un.
The president’s repeated pledge to apply diplomatic leverage upon the North was backed by a series of restrictive bills passed by the National Assembly late on Wednesday.
The list of bills included the antiterrorism bill and the North Korean human rights bill, the former expanding the power of the nation’s spy agency to monitor potential terror suspects and the latter allowing the government to investigate into Pyongyang’s human rights abuses.
The Seoul government also remained cautious in its stance on whether to proceed with a trilateral logistics project involving the two Koreas and Russia.
The “Rajin-Khasan logistics project” envisions the delivery of Russian coal into South Korea through the North Korean port city of Rajin. South Korean companies that have joined the project have conducted three test drives since 2014.
Further consultations have been suspended since the Feb. 7 rocket launch.
The South Korean Unification Ministry said it will consider various factors before making the decision. Russia’s foreign ministry said Wednesday that the project would not be affected by the new U.N. sanctions.
By Bae Hyun-jung (tellme@heraldcorp.com)
(责任编辑:行业动态)
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