Bangkok Post

Pyongyang’s nuclear programme ‘has doubled in size’

-

SEOUL: North Korea’s uranium enrichment facility has doubled in size over the past few years, the UN’s atomic watchdog chief has warned, as global tensions grow over Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons programme.

Yukiya Amano, head of the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) told the Wall Street Journal that the isolated state’s nuclear capacities are being ramped up.

“The situation is very bad ... It has gone into a new phase,” Mr Amano said, in the report published on Monday. “All of the indication­s point to the fact that North Korea is making progress, as they declared.”

Internatio­nal alarm over Pyongyang’s military ambitions has risen after a series of missile launches and nuclear tests last year, and earlier this month it fired four rockets in what it described as practice for an attack on US military bases in Japan.

The North, which also tested a powerful new rocket engine at the weekend to coincide with a trip to Asia by US Secretary State Rex Tillerson, has long coveted a missile capable of hitting the US mainland with a nuclear warhead.

Pyongyang has rapidly expanded its facilities for enriching uranium and plutonium production in recent years, Mr Amano told the Journal, expressing doubt over the potential for a diplomatic solution.

In January, South Korea said the North had enough plutonium to make 10 nuclear bombs, as well as a “considerab­le” ability to produce weapons based on highly enriched uranium.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand