Yorkshire Post

Trump to tighten up N Korea sanctions

- CHARLES BROWN NEWS REPORTER

DONALD TRUMP has added economic action to his military threats against North Korea and renewed his rhetorical offensive against Kim Jong Un, calling the leader “obviously a madman”.

The US president’s move to punish foreign companies that deal with the North was the latest salvo in a US-led campaign to isolate and impoverish Kim’s government until his country halts its missile and nuclear tests.

Mr Trump announced the measures as he met leaders from South Korea and Japan, the nations most immediatel­y endangered by North Korea’s threats of a military strike.

“North Korea’s nuclear weapons and missile developmen­t is a grave threat to peace and security in our world and it is unacceptab­le that others financiall­y support this criminal, rogue regime,” Mr Trump said as he joined Japanese PM Shinzo Abe and South Korean President Moon Jae-in for lunch. “Tolerance for this disgracefu­l practice must end now.”

Hours later, Kim branded him as “deranged” and warned that he will “pay dearly” for his threat to “totally destroy” the North if it attacks US interests.

The rare statement from the North Korean leader responded to Mr Trump’s combative speech days earlier when he issued a warning of potential obliterati­on for the isolated nation, and mocked the North’s young autocrat as a “Rocket Man” on a “suicide mission”. Returning insult with insult, Kim said the president was “unfit to hold the prerogativ­e of supreme command of a country”.

Kim described the president as “a rogue and a gangster fond of playing with fire”, and characteri­sed Mr Trump’s speech to the world body on Tuesday as “mentally deranged behaviour”.

The volley of insults continued on Friday as Mr Trump sent out a pre-dawn Twitter post: “Kim Jong Un of North Korea, who is obviously a madman who doesn’t mind starving or killing his people, will be tested like never before!”.

Mr Trump’s executive order expanded the Treasury Department’s ability to target anyone conducting significan­t trade in goods, services or technology with North Korea, and to ban them from interactin­g with the US financial system.

Mr Trump also said China was imposing major banking sanctions, but there was no immediate confirmati­on from the North’s most important trading partner.

North Korea’s top diplomat has reportedly warned that his country may test a hydrogen bomb in the Pacific Ocean. Foreign Minister Ri Yong Ho said his country’s response “could be the most powerful detonation of an H-bomb in the Pacific”, according to South Korean media.

 ??  ?? Family members wait for news of their relatives outside a quake-collapsed building in Mexico City.
Family members wait for news of their relatives outside a quake-collapsed building in Mexico City.

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