The Borneo Post

Japan deploys missile defence to northern island amid tension

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TOKYO: Japan deployed yesterday an additional missile defence system on its northern island of Hokkaido, days after North Korea launched a missile over the island, sparking emergency warnings to take cover.

“As part of measures to prepare for emergencie­s, we will today deploy a PAC- 3 unit” to a base of the nation’s Ground SelfDefens­e Force in the southern tip of Hokkaido, Defence Minister Itsunori Onodera told reporters.

The Patriot Advanced Capability­3 system arrived at the base later yesterday, a local defence official told AFP.

The move came with tensions on the Korean peninsula at feverpitch after Pyongyang carried out its sixth nuclear test and fired two missiles over Japan in the space of less than a month.

North Korea “may take further provocativ­e actions including launching ballistic missiles that would fly over Japan again in the future”, Onodera said, adding that his ministry “would take appropriat­e measures to protect people’s safety”.

According to local officials, Japan has already deployed the PAC- 3 system to another part of Hokkaido.

But defence officials declined to confirm where in Japan other systems were deployed, citing the sensitive nature of defence informatio­n.

North Korea has threatened to “sink” Japan into the sea and said Saturday it sought military “equilibriu­m” with arch- enemy the United States by developing a full nuclear arsenal.

Hawkish Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has said he would “never tolerate” the North’s “dangerous provocativ­e action” and has urged the internatio­nal community to ramp up pressure on Pyongyang.

The UN Security Council, which condemned the launch as “highly provocativ­e,” will hold a new ministeria­l-level meeting Thursday on the proliferat­ion of weapons of mass destructio­n, focused on enforcing sanctions on the North Korean regime. — AFP

 ??  ?? Vice Admiral Phillip Sawyer, the new US Seventh Fleet Commander, meets Onodera at the Defence Ministry in Tokyo. — Reuters photo
Vice Admiral Phillip Sawyer, the new US Seventh Fleet Commander, meets Onodera at the Defence Ministry in Tokyo. — Reuters photo

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