International News

North Korea fires missile in latest provocation

SEOUL, May 29, (APP/AFP): North Korea test-fired
a missile Monday into Japan’s maritime economic zone — the latest in a series of provocative launches that have ratcheted up tensions over its nuclear weapons ambitions.
It was the North’s third ballistic missile test in as many weeks and
the 12th this year — carried out in defiance of UN sanctions warnings and US threats of possible military action.
US military monitors said the short-range missile flew for six
minutes, while Japan said it fell into the country’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ) — waters extending 200 nautical miles from its coast.
The launch comes in fresh defiance of tough talk from US President
Donald Trump, who promised last week at the G7 summit that the “big problem” of North Korea “will be solved”.
Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe swiftly condemned the test and
vowed concerted action along with its US ally.
“We will never tolerate North Korea’s continued provocations that
ignore repeated warnings by the international community,” Abe told reporters.
“As agreed during the G7 summit, the North Korean problem is the
international community’s top priority. In order to deter North Korea, we will take concrete action with the United States.”
The North has been stepping up efforts towards its ultimate goal —
developing an intercontinental ballistic missile that can deliver a nuclear
warhead to the continental US.
The isolated but nuclear-armed North has test-fired a missile almost
every week for the past three weeks.
The latest, a short-range Scud, flew about 450 kilometres (280 miles)
before landing in the Sea of Japan (East Sea) between the Korean peninsula and Japan, the US Pacific Command said.
Monday’s test also marked the second time this year that a North
Korean missile fell provocatively close to its neighbour Japan.