The Borneo Post

China says no radiation harm from N. Korea nuclear test

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BEIJING: China has concluded that radiation levels remain normal in the provinces near the North Korean border after Pyongyang’s most powerful nuclear test yet spurred concerns of residual environmen­tal damage.

The Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection announced Sunday it was ending its emergency radiation monitoring in response to the blast last week, which the North claimed was the successful detonation of a hydrogen bomb.

“A comprehens­ive assessment has concluded that this DPRK nuclear test has caused no environmen­tal impact on China,” the ministry said in a statement posted on its website, using the initials of the North’s official name.

“After eight days of continuous monitoring, no abnormal results were shown.”

More than 1,000 aerosol, air, iodine, water and sediment samples were taken at monitoring stations in northeast Heilongjia­ng, Jilin and Liaoning provinces as well as in eastern Shandong province, according to the ministry.

The explosion from the most recent nuclear test, the North’s sixth, was considerab­ly larger than previous tests and was felt by residents in Chinese cities hundreds of kilometres from the border. — AFP

 ??  ?? Abe (right) and Defence Minister Itsunori Onodera (left) review the honour guard before a meeting with Japan Self-Defense Force’s senior members at the Defense Ministry in Tokyo. — Reuters photo
Abe (right) and Defence Minister Itsunori Onodera (left) review the honour guard before a meeting with Japan Self-Defense Force’s senior members at the Defense Ministry in Tokyo. — Reuters photo

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