Sanctions threats greet N. Korea rocket launch plans

03 Feb 2016 / 19:45 H.

SEOUL: South Korea and Japan yesterday echoed US warnings that North Korea would pay a heavy price if it pushes ahead with a planned rocket launch just weeks after conducting its fourth nuclear test.
Urging Pyongyang to drop its plans for a launch as early as next week, the government in Seoul said the move would be a serious breach of UN resolutions and a "direct challenge" to the international community.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe condemned what he called a "serious provocation," while his defence minister issued an order to "destroy" the rocket with surface-to-air missiles if it threatened to fall on Japanese territory.
The warnings came a day after the North announced a Feb 8-25 window for the launch, ostensibly aimed at putting an Earth observation satellite into orbit.
UN resolutions forbid the North from any use of ballistic missile technology, and Tuesday's announcement saw Pyongyang doubling down against an international community already struggling to come up with a united response to last month's nuclear test.
"It's a classic move," said John Delury, an associate professor at Yonsei University in Seoul.
"While waiting for a full response for the nuclear test, you might as well sneak in a rocket launch. The North tends to do these things in pairs," Delury said.
The United States, which has been spearheading a diplomatic drive for harsher, more effective sanctions on Pyongyang, was quick to condemn the launch plan.
Daniel Russel, the assistant US secretary of state for Asia-Pacific affairs slammed what he called "yet another egregious violation" of UN resolutions.
"This argues even more strongly for action by the UN Security Council and the international community to impose ... tough additional sanctions," Russel said.
In formal notifications sent to three UN agencies, including the International Maritime Organization (IMO), North Korea said the
launch would take place in the morning with a daily window of 7am-midday Pyongyang time(630am-1130am in Malaysia).
The dates suggest a launch around the time of the birthday on February 16 of late leader Kim Jong-Il, father of current leader Kim Jong-Un. – AFP

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