The Citizen (KZN)

N Korea warns ‘evil’ Trump, UN

SANCTIONS: COUNTRY VOWS TO REDOUBLE NUCLEAR EFFORTS ‘Stop suffocatin­g us’ – but South says Kim Jong-Un’s response is ‘low-key’.

- Seoul

North Korea vowed yesterday to accelerate its weapons programmes in response to “evil” sanctions imposed by the United Nations (UN) Security Council following its latest and most powerful nuclear test.

The respected 38 North website in the US raised its estimate for the yield from the explosion, which Pyongyang says was a hydrogen bomb small enough to fit onto a missile, to about 250 kilotons – more than 16 times the size of the device that devastated Hiroshima in 1945.

The detonation, Pyongyang’s sixth nuclear blast, prompted global condemnati­on and came after it carried out two interconti­nental ballistic missile (ICBM) launches in July that appeared to bring much of the US into range.

The UN Security Council unanimousl­y imposed an eighth set of sanctions on the North on Monday, banning it from trading in textiles and restrictin­g its oil imports, which US President Donald Trump said was a prelude to stronger measures.

The resolution, passed after Washington toned down its original proposals to secure backing from China and Russia, came just one month after the council banned exports of coal, lead and seafood in response to the ICBM launch.

The North’s foreign ministry condemned the new measures “in the strongest terms”, calling them a “full-scale economic blockade” driven by the US and aimed at “suffocatin­g” its state and people.

It was “another illegal and evil ‘resolution on sanctions’ piloted by the US”, it said in a statement carried by the official KCNA news agency.

“The DPRK will redouble the efforts to increase its strength to safeguard the country’s sovereignt­y and right to existence,” the ministry said, using the abbreviati­on for the North’s official name.

But the South’s unificatio­n ministry described the statement as “the most low-key form of response from North Korea to UN Security Council resolution­s”.

Seoul conducted its first livefire exercise of its new long-range Taurus missile in response to the nuclear test, its air force said.

The air-to-surface weapon was capable of precision strikes on key North Korean facilities.

The United States and its allies argue that tougher sanctions will pile pressure on North Korea to negotiate an end to its weapons programmes but experts are sceptical.

US President Donald Trump said the latest measures were a “very small step – not a big deal” that must lead to tougher measures.

“Those sanctions are nothing compared to ultimately what will happen,” Trump said.

The North says it needs nuclear weapons to protect itself from “hostile” US forces. Analysts believe Pyongyang’s weapons programme has made rapid progress under leader Kim Jong-Un, with previous sanctions having done little to deter it.

Washington had sought a full oil embargo and a freeze on the foreign assets of leader Kim JongUn in response to the blast, but dropped them following opposition from China and Russia.

The new resolution instead bans trade in textiles, cuts off natural gas shipments to North Korea, places a ceiling of two million barrels a year on deliveries of refined oil products and caps crude oil shipments at current levels.

Retail petrol prices in the North jumped earlier this year, with some analysts suggesting the authoritie­s were stockpilin­g in the expectatio­n of a ban. – AFP

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