The Manila Times

UN faces calls for more NKorea sanctions

- AFP

UNITED NATIONS, United States: The United Nations Security Council will hold an urgent meeting on Wednesday to discuss North Korea’s latest ballistic missile launch and calls from the United States for more sanctions on Pyongyang.

The United States, Japan and South Korea requested the meeting to address Pyongyang’s launch of what appeared to be an interconti­nental ballistic missile (ICBM) which Japan said probably fell within its exclusive economic zone.

Speaking in Washington, US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson called for “additional measures” to toughen up sanctions, including allowing countries to intercept vessels carrying goods to and from North Korea.

Council members will meet in open session from 4:30 p.m. (2130 GMT).

The council was already scheduled to discuss progress in implementi­ng three recently-adopted rounds of sanctions aimed at choking off revenue to Pyongyang’s military programs.

Since November last year, the council has slapped export bans on coal, iron, lead, textiles and seafood, restricted joint ventures and blackliste­d a number of North Korean entities in response to the country’s missile and nuclear tests.

It has also banned the hiring of North Korean guest workers and capped oil exports, in particular from China, Pyongyang’s main trading partner.

“There is still room for new measures,” Italian Ambassador Sebastiano Cardi, who holds the council presidency, told reporters. “We will see.”

Under UN resolution­s, North Korea is barred from developing missiles and a nuclear weapons capability but Pyongyang argues that the arsenal is needed for selfdefens­e against the “hostile” United States.

Hopes for diplomacy dashed

ballistic missile test in more than two months, ending a lull that some diplomats said had opened a window of opportunit­y for diplomatic talks.

“It’s certainly another worrying developmen­t,” said Cardi. “Everybody was hoping that there would be restraint from the regime.”

It was also, apparently, the North’s third successful test of an ICBM which has the range to reach the mainland United States, although experts caution Pyongyang may not yet have mastered the full technical capability.

The Pentagon said its initial assess 1,000 kilometers (620 miles).

The United States has been the driving force behind the ratcheting up of internatio­nal sanctions against North Korea, but it has faced tough negotiatio­ns with China.

During the latest round of UN sanctions negotiatio­ns in September, demands for an oil embargo, measures blacklisti­ng North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un and authorizat­ion to inspect North Korean vessels were dropped in the face of Chinese resistance.

China, which like the United States is a veto-holding council member, has argued that tougher sanctions could worsen the humanitari­an crisis and push the regime into a corner.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines