Hindustan Times (Delhi)

North Korea urges nuclear arms buildup on nation’s anniversar­y

- Agence FrancePres­se letters@hindustant­imes.com

DEFYING GLOBAL PRESSURE Ruling party calls for more ‘miraclelik­e events’ such as missile tests to deter US

North Korea’s state media marked the nation’s founding anniversar­y on Saturday with calls for a nuclear arms buildup, in defiance of mounting internatio­nal sanctions.

South Korea’s military said it was keeping close tabs on the North amid speculatio­n it could stage a missile launch or another nuclear test to mark the 1948 establishm­ent of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

North Korea conducted its fifth nuclear test on September 9 last year, and then carried out a sixth a week ago, saying it was a hydrogen bomb that could be fitted onto a missile -- prompting global condemnati­on.

In July, it tested two interconti­nental ballistic missiles that appeared to bring much of the mainland US into range.

“The defence sector, in step with the party’s Byungjin policy (of developing the economy and nuclear weapons at the same time) must make cutting-edge Juche weapons in greater quantities,” the Rodong Sinmun said in an editorial, referring to the national philosophy of “Juche” or self-reliance.

The mouthpiece of the North’s ruling party called for more “miracle-like events” such as the two ICBM tests to deter the US which it said was bent on “decapitati­ng” the nation’s leader Kim Jong-Un.

“No matter how the US and its puppets kick up a ruckus, our republic, which has a strong military and the most powerful Juche bombs and weapons, and whose territory has all turned into fortresses, and all its people armed to the teeth, will remain an eternal iron-clad citadel,” it said.

In another commentary, Rodong Sinmun said the US would continue receiving “gift packages in different shapes and sizes” as long as it sticks to “a hostile policy” against the North.

Kim has called the ICBM tests “gift packages” that the North was delivering to the US. YouTube has cut off access to a state-run North Korean propaganda channel.

The shutting of Uriminzokk­iri, which regularly posted footage boasting of the North’s nuclear and missile programmes and others praising the Kim Jong-Un, was confirmed on Saturday.

YouTube gives no details on reasons why particular accounts are closed down, or for how long. But advertisin­g revenue generated by the accounts could violate US trade sanctions against North Korea.

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