UN response to Korean missile launch fails

While Japan, South Korea, and the U.S. demand a strong response to North Korea's missile launch, the UN emergency meeting has ended withouth agreement.

Article Tools

The emergency meeting called by the United Nations Security Council to discuss North Korea's rocket launch has ended without agreement. Yesterday morning at 11.30 local time, Pyongyang sent its’ rocket into orbit, but after less than 13 minutes of flight the experiment failed. The first module ended up in the Sea of Japan 270 km from the prefecture of Akita; the second fell in the Pacific Ocean 1200 km from the Japanese coast.

The International Community is concerned, amid fears that North Korea’s experiment is the first step towards realising a missile capable of carrying nuclear warheads. Pyongyang has always maintained the legitimacy of its “peaceful space-program” aimed at realising a “telecommunications satellite”.

In light of this, the United Nations is divided over eventual sanctions to adopt against the communist regime. Diplomats confirm that talks have broken down; international analysts underline that any accord will take days. Washington and Tokyo demand a “strong response”; Moscow and Beijing are more cautious, Chinese representatives to the UN report that any measures taken by the Security Council must be “cautious and proportional”.

Today the South Korean parliament adopted a resolution which denounces the launch because it constitutes “serious provocation” and urges “international cooperation to sanction the communist regime”. Hyun In-taek, South Korean Unification Minister, adds that North Korea should think of feeding its people, who are starving, if it has the capital to invest in space experiments.

Strong condemnation also arrives from the US President Barak Obama. In a speech concluding the summit between the United States and European Union, Obama affirmed that North Korea has “further isolated itself from the community of nations”, underlining “the urgency for a program against nuclear proliferation”.



sponsored by
Sponsored by ClearKitchen.com -- new products for cooking and entertaining.
Related Articles

Korea: More than 20,000 North Korean refugees in South Korea

According to South Korean authorities, North Koreans fleeing Kim Jong-il’s regime is greater every year. The Church is working for the integration of the ‘Saetomin”, the refugees who end up at the bottom of the social ladder.

South Korea has world’s lowest birth rate

For the second consecutive year, the number of births declined from 466,000 in 2008 to 445,000 in 2009. The fertility rate among women 15 to 49 now stands at 1.14, a drop of .04 per cent. The net result is an aging population, a trend that will inevitably affect the country’s welfare system.
Add to Newsvine Add to Facebook Add to Digg Add to Twitter Add to DeliciousAdd to PropellerAdd to TechnoratiAdd to StumbleUponAdd to FurlAdd to BlinklistAdd to FarkAdd to Reddit
Filed under korea, security, military, us, un, war
Asia RSS
Comments
Your E-mail Address:

Privacy Statement
 


© Copyright Spero, All rights reserved. RSS
Spero News on Twitter
Spero News on Google Buzz
Submit a tip
Advertise
Terms of use
Privacy Policy
Contact
This page took 0.7070seconds to load