Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

United Nations bans key North Korea exports over missile tests

UNANIMOUS ACTION Resolution passed at UNSC blacklists 9 individual­s and 4 entities including North Korea’s primary foreign exchange bank

- Yashwant Raj letters@hindustant­imes.com

WASHINGTON: In a unanimous vote on Saturday, the United Nations Security Council put a third of North Korea’s annual $3 billion exports under sanctions for continuing to violate the world body’s resolution­s prohibitin­g it from conducting nuclear and missile tests.

Initiated by the United States, the new sanctions are the most severe yet and will affect its major exports — coal, iron, iron ore, lead, lead ore and seafood.

The sanctions also apply to North Korea’s Foreign Trade Bank — the country’s primary foreign exchange bank — and prohibits it from increasing the number of workers it sends abroad, whose earnings contribute to the country’s foreign exchange revenues.

The sanctions marked a major diplomatic victory for US President Donald Trump, who tweeted, “United Nations Resolution is the single largest economic sanctions package ever on North Korea. Over one billion dollars in cost to NK.”

His ambassador to the UN, Nikki Haley, called the sanctions the “most stringent … in a generation” and said that “they will cut deep, and in doing so, will give the North Korean leadership a taste of the deprivatio­n they have chosen to inflict on the North Korean people”.

The new sanctions came in the aftermath of North Korea conducting two tests of interconti­nental ballistic missiles in July, which experts say could potentiall­y reach the United States mainland.

The unanimous vote also reflected Beijing’s growing impatience with Pyongyang. China has long been North Korea’s largest trading partner and, possibly its only ally providing it cover in times of global outrage caused by its nuclear and missile tests.

Trump had earlier sought to outsource the North Korea issue — he had been greeted by a string of tests by supreme leader Kim Jong Un since his inaugurati­on in January — to China urging it to use its considerab­le clout to rein in its tests. That didn’t go too well according to him when he accused Beijing of failing to match its words with action. It’s been “just talk”, he fumed in a tweet.

India, which is North Korea’s second largest trading partner, notified compliance in April with an earlier UN sanction banning export of all goods — except food and medicines — that could be used in nuclear or missile programmes.

 ?? AP ?? British ambassador to the UN Matthew Rycroft (left) and US ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley vote during a security council meeting on new sanctions on North Korea on Saturday.
AP British ambassador to the UN Matthew Rycroft (left) and US ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley vote during a security council meeting on new sanctions on North Korea on Saturday.

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