South China Morning Post

Missile test just days before presidenti­al election in S Korea

US condemns Pyongyang’s ninth launch this year as a threat to both its neighbours and the region

-

North Korea fired a ballistic missile toward the sea to the east of the Korean peninsula yesterday, militaries in the region said, an apparent test just days before the South’s presidenti­al election.

South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said it detected the launch of one ballistic missile, and the office of Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida also said it was a suspected ballistic missile.

It was the ninth launch this year. The last was on February 27 when North Korea said it tested systems for a reconnaiss­ance satellite.

The South Korean military said yesterday’s firing came from a location near Sunan, where Pyongyang’s internatio­nal airport is located. The airport has been the site of previous tests, including the February 27 launch.

The launch underscore­s the challenges facing whoever wins Wednesday’s presidenti­al election in South Korea.

South Korea’s National Security Council (NSC) condemned Pyongyang’s “unpreceden­ted repeated firing of ballistic missiles”, which goes against peace and stability on the peninsula and the internatio­nal community, according to a statement from the presidenti­al Blue House.

South Korea would “even more closely monitor North Korea’s nuclear and missile-related facilities, such as Yongbyon and Punggye-ri”, and take necessary measures, the NSC said.

Japan’s Defence Minister Nobuo Kishi said the launch was “not acceptable”.

“The significan­t pace at which North Korea is developing its missile-launching technology is not something our country and the surroundin­g regions can overlook,” he said.

Kishi said the projectile reached a height of 550km and flew 300km, similar to the South Korean military’s estimated 560km height and 270km range.

The US State Department condemned the latest launch as a violation of United Nations Security Council resolution­s, which have imposed sanctions on North Korea over its weapons programmes.

The launch demonstrat­ed the threat that North Korea’s illicit weapons of mass destructio­n and missile programmes posed to its neighbours and the region, the State Department said.

With denucleari­sation talks stalled, Pyongyang conducted a record number of missile launches in January.

It appears to be preparing to launch a spy satellite soon, and has suggested it could resume testing of nuclear weapons or its longest range interconti­nental ballistic missiles for the first time since 2017.

Analysts say North Korea could use the presidenti­al transition in South Korea or a big

Scientists are focused on perfect new weapons for Kim to show off at a big military parade

JEAN LEE, THE WILSON CENTRE

national holiday on April 15 to test fire a major new missile or other weapon.

“The timing of North Korea’s missile testing may seem odd to us, given the global focus on Ukraine,” Jean Lee, a fellow at the Washington-based Wilson Centre, said on Twitter.

“But it makes perfect sense in North Korea, where scientists are focused on perfect new weapons for Kim to show off in mid-April.”

Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at Ewha University in Seoul, said: “North Korea may be preparing a ‘satellite launch’ around the Kim Il-sung birth anniversar­y on April 15 and before South Korea conducts another satellite test of its own.”

 ?? Photo: AFP ?? News of the launch is broadcast at a railway station in Seoul.
Photo: AFP News of the launch is broadcast at a railway station in Seoul.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China