Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

North Korea holds mass celebratio­ns for latest missile test

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SEOUL, Dec 2 (AFP) - North Korea held mass celebratio­ns for its latest successful long-range missile test, Pyongyang's state media said Saturday, with a propaganda-filled display of fireworks and dancing in public squares.

The ruling Workers Party official daily Rodong Sinmun covered its front page with colour photograph­s showing thousands of tightly packed soldiers and people applauding in Pyongyang's Kim Il- Sung square, which was decorated with large portraits of the North's late leaders.

“We heartily celebrate the successful test launch of the Hwasong- 15 which showed Chosun (North Korea)'s power and greatness to the whole world”, read one banner held up by the crowd, referring to the missile.

North Korea on Wednesday successful­ly tested a new interconti­nental ballistic mis- sile, with leader Kim Jong-Un declaring his country had now achieved full nuclear statehood. The US in response warned that Kim Jong- Un's regime would be “utterly destroyed” if its pursuit of a long- range nuclear missile arsenal provokes a military clash, and has battled to maintain internatio­nal solidarity in the face of North Korea's nuclear threat.

Kim himself was absent from the celebratio­ns -- he usually stays away from such events -- but Friday's gathering drew key military, party and government leaders.

Vice Chairman Pak Kwang- Ho of the party's decision- making Central Committee told the crowd that, after Wednesday's test launch, “now no one can infringe our sovereignt­y and rights to survive and develop”, according to the daily.

He said that the United States had been “jolted” at the strengthen­ing of North Korea's nuclear force and could attempt to commit “robber-like” provocativ­e acts.

He repeated Kim's warning that the North would respond with the “highest level of hard-line countermea­sure in history”.

The ICBM Hwasong- 15 type weaponry system used in Wednesday's test is an interconti­nental ballistic rocket tipped with super-large heavy warhead capable of striking the whole mainland of the US, the North said.

But analysts remain unconvince­d that the North has mastered the technology required to launch and direct a missile, and ensure it survives the difficult re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere.

Tensions are expected to rise further in the coming week as South Korea and the United States launch a massive air force drill mobilising some 230 aircraft including six US F-22 Raptor stealth jet fighters.

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