The Sunday Times of Malta

Japan puts military on alert fearing N. Korean missile

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Japan yesterday ordered its military to prepare to shoot down a North Korean ballistic missile after Pyongyang said this week it was ready to launch its first military spy satellite.

Placing the satellite into orbit would require a long-range projectile, which North Korea is banned from launching because the United Nations views such exercises as tests of ballistic missile technology.

Yesterday Japanese minister Yasukazu Hamada told the country’s Self-Defense Forces “there is a possibilit­y of ordering destructiv­e measures against ballistic missiles and others”, according to a statement from the ministry of defence.

Hamada instructed troops to “implement measures necessary to limit damage in the event of a ballistic missile falling”.

He ordered preparatio­ns for the deployment of destroyers equipped with SM-3 missile intercepto­rs, as well as military units in the southern prefecture of Okinawa that can operate Patriot PAC-3 missiles.

In 2012 and 2016, North Korea tested ballistic missiles that Pyongyang called satellite launches.

Both missiles flew over the Okinawa region.

Japanese media reported yesterday that the defence ministry issued the same preparatio­n orders in 2012.

Pyongyang has not provided a launch date, with leader Kim Jong Un only saying the satellite will be sent up “at the planned date”.

On Tuesday G7 foreign ministers meeting in Japan demanded North Korea refrain from any further ballistic missile tests following a spate of launches this year.

The group of rich nations also warned Pyongyang against carrying out an expected nuclear weapons test and said there would be a “robust” response if it did not comply.

A week ago Pyongyang said it had successful­ly tested a solid-fuel interconti­nental ballistic missile, hailing it as a breakthrou­gh for the country’s nuclear counteratt­ack capabiliti­es.

 ?? ?? Children held by their parents start their ‘Baby-cry Sumo’ match, resumed for the first time in four years due to the COVID-19 coronaviru­s pandemic, at the Sensoji temple in Tokyo yesterday. PHOTO: PHILIP FONG/AFP
Children held by their parents start their ‘Baby-cry Sumo’ match, resumed for the first time in four years due to the COVID-19 coronaviru­s pandemic, at the Sensoji temple in Tokyo yesterday. PHOTO: PHILIP FONG/AFP

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