Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

N. Korea nuke tests rattle hills, harm environmen­t

- BARBARA DEMICK LOS ANGELES TIMES Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Matt DeButts of the Los Angeles Times.

NEW YORK — Mount Paektu is an active volcano that occupies a revered place in Korean legend as the birthplace of the Korean people. But it may be paying a price for their division.

Sitting on the border of North Korea and China, the volcano has been appropriat­ed by Pyongyang as the “sacred mountain of the revolution.” Propagandi­sts for the communist state spin a tale, most likely apocryphal, that the late leader Kim Jong Il was born there while his father was a guerrilla fighting the Japanese.

The sacred mountain, however, is just 60 miles from the site where North Korea, now led by Kim’s son, Kim Jong Un, tested its sixth and most powerful nuclear weapon on Sept. 3.

Shortly afterward, Chinese authoritie­s closed part of the tourist park on their side of the border because of rock slides. Chinese authoritie­s would not say definitive­ly whether the nuclear test was to blame, but seismologi­sts think it is likely.

The explosion registered as a magnitude-6.3 earthquake and was blamed for water bottles rolling off tables and furniture toppling in China, and apartment buildings rattling all the way to the Russian port city of Vladivosto­k.

It is just one example of the way that North Korea’s headlong rush to become a nuclear power is degrading the environmen­t in and around the country’s borders.

The first casualty is inside North Korea itself, around the rugged, granite mountains of North Hamgyong province. All six of North Korea’s nuclear tests have taken place there at a site known as Punggye-Ri.

Satellite images taken after the last test show numerous landslides around the site as well as water leaking from the entrance to one of the tunnels, according to 38 North, an academic website on Korea run by Johns Hopkins University.

“These disturbanc­es are more numerous and widespread than seen after any of the North’s previous five tests, and include additional slippage in pre-existing landslide scars and a possible subsidexte­nsive ence crater,” the report said.

Another analysis of satellite data found that Mount Mantap, a 7,000-foot peak above the test site, lost a little elevation from the force of the undergroun­d explosion.

“It did move the mountain,” said Jeffrey Lewis, director of the East Asia Nonprolife­ration Program at the Middlebury Institute of Internatio­nal Studies at Monterey.

He said he believes, however, that there has been no significan­t leakage of radiation because the test took place in a tunnel more than 3,000 feet undergroun­d and notes that the visible damage was less than after undergroun­d tests in Pakistan.

After the nuclear test, the ground around the test site continued to rumble. Seismologi­sts were particular­ly stumped by a tremor recorded Sept. 23 that appeared to be a magnitude-3.4 earthquake under Mount Mantap, an area that does not ordinarily experience earthquake­s. A joint report published by the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the University of California, Santa Cruz concluded that tunnels in the test site collapsed.

“It was the mountain collapsing into the cavity created by the explosion … hundreds of meters below the surface,” said Thorne Lay, a professor at the California university.

What analysts are looking for in the satellite images are fissures and craters — which would indicate a breach in the mountain large enough to allow radiation in dangerous quantities to vent to the outside.

“These are minor landslides, nothing like you see in California with mud pouring down,” said Joseph Bermudez, a leading expert on the North Korean military and one of the authors of the 38 North report.

“Still, if I were near any nuclear test site, I would be concerned about the environmen­t, especially an active test site,” Bermudez added.

North Korea has conducted all six of its nuclear tests around the same site. The Sept. 3 test involved a device estimated at 250 kilotons — 17 times the force of the bomb that destroyed Hiroshima, Japan, in 1945.

“Every country that has developed a nuclear program has harmed its own people,” said Matthew McKinzie, director of the nuclear program at the Natural Resources Defense Council.

He compares the situation to East Germany, where the extent of environmen­tal degradatio­n wasn’t known until after reunificat­ion in 1990.

The satellite photograph­s taken after the last test show water draining from the test site that was likely forced out from undergroun­d by the explosion and could leach into the groundwate­r. A stream near the test site runs to the nearest sizable city, Kilju, some 25 miles away.

Even closer is the Hwasong labor camp, which is nestled next to Mount Mantap and houses an estimated 20,000 political prisoners and their families. North Korean defectors in South Korea have said they believe prisoners were used to dig the tunnels of the nuclear test complex.

Satellite images also show that North Korea has failed to dispose safely of nuclear waste.

In Pyongsan, north of the capital, Pyongyang, tailings are routinely dumped from North Korea’s largest uranium mine into an unlined pond, which is likely to contaminat­e the groundwate­r, 38 North has reported.

Defectors have complained as well about the environmen­tal and safety risks of the nuclear program.

“North Korea’s facilities are dilapidate­d … and North Korea woefully lacks the ability to manage the facilities,” wrote a defector group, North Korea Intellectu­als Solidarity, in a brochure published last year.

 ?? The New York Times/Planet Labs ?? Images of Mount Mantap above North Korea’s nuclear test site, taken before (top) and after the Sept. 3 nuclear test, show the wide disturbanc­es to the 7,000-foot peak.
The New York Times/Planet Labs Images of Mount Mantap above North Korea’s nuclear test site, taken before (top) and after the Sept. 3 nuclear test, show the wide disturbanc­es to the 7,000-foot peak.

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