Yuma Sun

North Korea fires ballistic missile

- BY HYUNG-JIN KIM, KIM TONGHYUNG AND MARI YAMAGUCHI

SEOUL, South Korea – North Korea launched a ballistic missile toward its eastern waters on Wednesday, South Korean and Japanese officials said, days after North Korean leader Kim Jong Un vowed to speed up the developmen­t of his nuclear weapons “at the fastest possible pace” and threatened to use them against rivals.

The launch, the North’s 14th round of weapons firing this year, also came six days before a new conservati­ve South Korean president takes office for a single five-year term.

South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement that the missile was fired from the North’s capital region and flew to the waters off its eastern coast. It called North Korea’s repeated ballistic missile launches “a grave threat” that would undermine internatio­nal peace and security and a violation of U.N. Security Council resolution­s banning any ballistic launch by the North.

The statement said that Won In-Choul, the South Korean JCS chief, held a video conference about the launch with Gen. Paul LaCamera, an American general who heads the South Korea-U.S. combined forces command in Seoul, and they agreed to maintain a solid joint defense posture.

Japan also detected the North Korean launch and quickly condemned it.

“North Korea’s series of actions that threatens the peace, safety and stability of the internatio­nal community are impermissi­ble,” Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida told reporters during his visit to Rome.

Kishida said he would discuss the launch when he met Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi later Wednesday. “Naturally, we will exchange views on the regional situation in the Indo-Pacific and East Asia, and I will thoroughly explain the reality of the region including the North Korean missile launch today, to gain understand­ing about the pressing situation in the East Asia,” he said.

Japanese Vice Defense Minister Makoto Oniki said that the missile was believed to have landed in waters outside of the Japanese Exclusive Economic Zone. There has been no report of damage or injury reported from vessels and aircraft in the area.

It wasn’t immediatel­y known what missile was launched by the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, or DPRK, the North’s official name. South Korea’s military said the missile flew about 470 kilometers (290 miles) at the apogee of 780 kilometers (485 miles), while Oniki of Japan said it traveled about 500 kilometers (310 miles) at the maximum altitude of 800 kilometers (500 miles).

U.N. spokespers­on Stephane Dujarric said the latest launch and other

North Korean activities using ballistic missile technology “only contribute­s to increasing regional and internatio­nal tensions.”

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres “again urges the DPRK to fully comply with its internatio­nal

obligation­s under relevant Security Council resolution­s,” he said. “Diplomatic engagement remains the only pathway to sustainabl­e peace and complete and verifiable denucleari­zation of the Korean peninsula.”

 ?? LEE JIN-MAN/AP ?? PEOPLE WATCH A TV SCREEN showing a news program reporting about North Korea’s missile launch with file footage, at a train station in Seoul, South Korea, on Wednesday.
LEE JIN-MAN/AP PEOPLE WATCH A TV SCREEN showing a news program reporting about North Korea’s missile launch with file footage, at a train station in Seoul, South Korea, on Wednesday.

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