Times of Suriname

Cathay Pacific flight crew say they saw North Korean missile test

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JAPAN - The crew of a Cathay Pacific flight from San Francisco to Hong Kong reported seeing a North Korean ballistic missile break up and fall out of the sky last week, the airline has said, highlighti­ng an unforeseen danger of Pyongyang’s weapons tests. Flight trackers put the plane close to Japan around the time of Pyongyang’s Hwasong-15 missile test on 29 November. The missile fell into the Sea of Japan. Pyongyang claimed its latest interconti­nental ballistic missile was capable of striking anywhere in the US. North Korea has not yet proved it can mount a miniaturis­ed nuclear warhead on its missiles, but the latest test is likely to strengthen its negotiatin­g power with Washington. “The flight crew of CX893 reported a sighting of what is suspected to be the re-entry of the recent DPRK test missile”, an airline spokesman said, referring to North Korea’s official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. “Though the flight was far from the event location, the crew advised Japan according to procedures.” The flight was not affected and the company had no plans to change existing routes, the airline said.

Mark Hoey, Cathay Pacific’s general manager of operations, recounted the message from the crew of the passenger plane to ground staff. “Be advised, we witnessed the DPRK missile blow up and fall apart near our current location”, the pilots said, according to a report in the South China Morning Post. A Cathay Pacific cargo plane – CX096 – may have been even closer to the missile, at a lateral distance of a few hundred metres, Hoey added, according to the report. That flight was bound for Alaska and was also over Japan at the time of the missile test.

(Theguardia­n.com)

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