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Defying sanctions

Seoul: Nuke test ‘fanatic recklessne­ss’

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North Korea said it conducted a “higher level” nuclear test explosion on Friday that will allow it to finally build an array of stronger, smaller and lighter nuclear weapons. It was the North’s fifth atomic test and the second in eight months.

South Korea’s president said the detonation, which Seoul estimated was the North’s biggest ever in explosive yield, was an act of “fanatic recklessne­ss” and a sign leader Kim Jong Un “is spiralling out of control.”

President Barack Obama condemned the test and said the U.S. would never accept the country as a nuclear power.

North Korea’s boast of a technologi­cally game-changing nuclear test defied both tough internatio­nal sanctions and long-standing diplomatic pressure to curb its nuclear ambitions.

It will raise serious worries in many world capitals that North Korea has moved another step closer to its goal of a nucleararm­ed missile that could one day strike the U.S. mainland.

The UN Security Council scheduled an emergency meeting later Friday to discuss the test.

Seoul vowed to boost psychologi­cal warfare efforts by increasing the number of propaganda loudspeake­rs along the rivals’ border, the world’s most heavily armed, and the number of hours of anti-North Korean broadcasts.

Hours after South Korea noted unusual seismic activity near North Korea’s northeaste­rn nuclear test site, the North said in its state-run media that a test had “finally examined and confirmed the structure and specific features of movement of (a) nuclear warhead that has been standardiz­ed to be able to be mounted on strategic ballistic rockets.”

“The standardiz­ation of the nuclear warhead will enable (North Korea) to produce at will and as many as it wants a variety of smaller, lighter and diversifie­d nuclear warheads of higher strike power,” North Korea said. “This has definitely put on a higher level (the North’s) technology of mounting nuclear warheads on ballistic rockets.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? South Korean President Park Geun-hye, top second right, presides over an emergency meeting at the presidenti­al house in Seoul, South Korea, to discuss follow-up measures to respond to North Korea’s nuclear test.
AP PHOTO South Korean President Park Geun-hye, top second right, presides over an emergency meeting at the presidenti­al house in Seoul, South Korea, to discuss follow-up measures to respond to North Korea’s nuclear test.

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