The Borneo Post

South Korea to announce new sanctions on North

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SEOUL: South Korea will soon announce its own tougher sanctions on North Korea, an official said yesterday, a move set to further heighten tensions as Seoul and Washington begin their largest- ever joint military exercise.

The new measures -- following Wednesday’s decision by the UN Security Council to slap unpreceden­ted sanctions on the North -- will be announced this week, a Seoul government official said on condition of anonymity.

The Security Council announced its toughest sanctions yet to punish the North for its recent nuclear and missile tests in violation of UN resolution­s.

The North responded within hours by test-firing rockets into the sea. Its leader Kim Jong- Un ordered the nation’s nuclear arsenal to be readied for preemptive use at ‘any moment’.

The Seoul official did not elaborate on the South’s separate sanctions.

Yonhap news agency said they would include banning any ships which have previously docked in the North from South Korean ports.

A group of North Korean individual­s and organisati­ons believed involved in weapons developmen­t will also be added to a blacklist, it said, citing a government source.

In February, in an unpreceden­tedly tough move, the South announced the total shutdown of a jointly- run industrial park in North Korea, saying Pyongyang had been using it to fund its nuclear weapons programmes.

Today, South Korea and its close ally the US begin their annual Key Resolve/Foal Eagle military drill.

This year’s will be the largesteve­r, with the US reportedly sending more than 15,000 troops — four times as many as last year — to the Key Resolve drill, which is largely a computer- simulated exercise.

Foal Eagle — a field exercise also involving US strategic assets including a naval fleet led by an aircraft carrier and nuclearpow­ered submarines — is also expected to be far bigger than before.

Seoul says the drills, which continue through April 30, are defensive in nature but Pyongyang has habitually slammed them as a preparatio­n for war. — AFP

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