The Star Malaysia

Blasted with fresh sanctions

N. Korea’s missile tests trigger stern response

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Washington: The United States, Japan and South Korea have imposed fresh sanctions on North Korean individual­s and entities in response to Pyongyang’s recent slew of missile tests.

Washington’s action, announced on Thursday, blocks any assets of three North Korean officials in the United States, a largely symbolic step against an isolated country that has defied internatio­nal pressure over its weapons programmes.

The US Treasury Department also threatened sanctions against anyone who conducts transactio­ns with Jon Il-ho, Yu-jin and Kim Su-gil, who were identified as directly involved in weapons developmen­t.

The recent North Korean missile launches, including the test of an interconti­nental ballistic missile with the range to hit the US mainland, “pose grave security risks to the region and entire world,” Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a statement.

The sanctions “underscore our sustained resolve to promote accountabi­lity in response to Pyongyang’s pace, scale and scope of ballistic missile launches”.

Blinken added that the action was taken in coordinati­on with US allies South Korea and Japan, and noted that the European Union issued similar designatio­ns of the three in April.

Tokyo and Seoul on Friday also announced new sanctions.

South Korea said it would target eight individual­s, including a Taiwanese and a Singaporea­n national. They have “contribute­d to North Korea’s nuclear and missile developmen­t and evasion of (pre-existing) sanctions”, the South Korean foreign ministry said in a statement.

All are already subject to US sanctions, the ministry added, and South Korea’s new restrictio­ns are expected to “alert the domestic and internatio­nal community of the risks of transactio­ns with these entities”.

And Japan said that in response to Pyongyang’s “provocativ­e acts”, it was freezing the assets of three North Korean groups and one person, Kim Su-il.

The United States has voiced frustratio­n that China, North Korea’s closest ally, and Russia have blocked efforts at the UN Security Council to impose tougher sanctions.

 ?? ?? Hit from all sides: North Korean leader Kim Jong-un inspecting a missile test at an undisclose­d location in North Korea, in this photo taken sometime between Sept 25 and Oct 9. — AP
Hit from all sides: North Korean leader Kim Jong-un inspecting a missile test at an undisclose­d location in North Korea, in this photo taken sometime between Sept 25 and Oct 9. — AP

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