The Asian Age

Japan announces fresh North Korea sanctions

Seoul suspends operations at joint industrial park

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Tokyo/ Seoul, Feb. 10: Japan announced fresh sanctions against North Korea on Wednesday for its latest rocket launch, including a total ban on shipping from the country and barring Pyongyang’s nationals from entering.

Japan’s announceme­nt comes after the UN Security Council strongly condemned Sunday’s rocket launch and agreed to move quickly to impose new sanctions of its own.

“We have decided to take firm sanction steps,” Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told reporters of the latest move, which adds to measures Japan already has in place over past North Korean nuclear and missile tests.

“All North Korean ships, including those for humanitari­an purposes, shall be banned from coming to Japanese ports,” the statement said. “Thirdcount­ry ships that visited North Korea shall be also banned from entering,” it added. The measures also toughen financial reporting requiremen­ts for people transporti­ng cash to North Korea, the statement added.

The measures bring back and add to some sanctions that Japan eased in 2014, such as the travel ban, after Pyongyang agreed to re- investigat­e issues related to Japanese nationals kidnapped by North Korean agents decades ago.

The announceme­nt came as South Korea also decided to suspend all operations at a jointly run Kaesong industrial park in North Korea to punish Pyongyang. It was the first time Seoul had suspended operations at the estate since it opened in 2004 as a symbol of cross- border reconcilia­tion. “Today, in order to stop funds of the Kaesong Industrial Complex from being used to support the developmen­t of North Korea’s nuclear and missile capabiliti­es... The government has decided to completely shut down” operations, a statement said.

The Seoul- funded estate, just 10 km across the border in North Korea, has been a precious source of hard currency for the isolated and impoverish­ed North since its opening. Some 124 South Korean companies operate factories there, employing about 53,000 North Korean workers. — AFP

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