The Star Malaysia

South Korea to impose new sanctions on Pyongyang

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Seoul: South Korea will impose new unilateral sanctions against nuclear-armed Pyongyang, a report said, in Seoul’s latest effort to pressure the North after a series of weapons tests that have sent regional tensions surging.

The move comes after a rare visit by a senior UN official to North Korea, who called for dialogue between Pyongyang and the internatio­nal community to avert a potentiall­y catastroph­ic “miscalcula­tion” in the high-stakes nuclear crisis.

Seoul’s new measures, its second set of unilateral sanctions in a month, are likely to draw an angry response from Pyongyang, which views its neighbour as overly-dependent on a hostile Washington.

A total of 20 North Korean organisati­ons, including banks and trading companies, and 12 North Korean individual­s – mostly bankers – will be blackliste­d as of today, the South’s Yonhap news agency reported citing a foreign ministry official.

“The organisati­ons and individual­s were involved in supplying money needed to develop weapons of mass destructio­n or illegal trading of sanctioned items,” the official said, according to Yonhap.

The measures are in addition to those by the UN Security Council, which has hit the isolated and impoverish­ed North with a package of sanctions over its increasing­ly powerful missile and nuclear tests.

China, Pyongyang’s sole major diplomatic and military ally, has also backed the UN embargoes, but has repeatedly pushed for talks to diffuse tensions.

The UN’s under-secretary-general Jeffrey Feltman visited the North just a week after Pyongyang said it test-fired a new ballistic missile capable of reaching the United States.

His trip also coincided with the US and South Korea’s biggest-ever joint air exercise, which the North slammed as a provocatio­n and revealing an intention to “mount a surprise nuclear pre-emptive strike”.

Seoul’s sanctions will bar South Korean individual­s and entities from transactin­g with those on the list but it will be largely symbolic given a lack of inter-Korean economic ties.

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