WORLD / Asia-Pacific

N.Korea launches missiles, UN to meet
(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-07-05 12:43

JULY 4 FIREWORKS

North Korea, whose government pays close attention to symbolic gestures, chose July 4, the day the United States marks Independence Day, for the launch. It came just hours after the U.S. space shuttle Discovery blasted off from Florida.

"It got everybody's attention on the Fourth of July. (North Korean leader) Kim Jong-Il can set off fireworks, too," said John Pike, director of the security Web site GlobalSecurity.org.

Japan said it would consider immediate economic sanctions against North Korea. NHK television reported that the government had banned visits by North Korean ferries for six months.

The Japanese yen and the South Korean won both slipped against the dollar on the launch news, with Tokyo and Seoul stock markets also lower. In Seoul, the government said South Korean authorities would take action if necessary.

Tokyo also called on Pyongyang to return to six-country talks on ending its nuclear weapons programme, which have been stalled since November.

"It is regrettable and we protest strongly against North Korea for going ahead with a launch despite warnings from relevant countries, including Japan," Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe told a news conference in Tokyo.

"It is a serious problem from the standpoint of our national security, peace and stability of the international community and proliferation of weapons of mass destruction."

In a separate incident, but underlining the tensions in the region, Japan summoned South Korea's ambassador to demand Seoul halt a survey of disputed waters that began earlier in the day.

South Korea and Japan came close to a high-seas showdown in April when Tokyo said it planned a survey in waters near a desolate outcrop of islands called Tokto in Korean and Takeshima in Japanese, but tensions eased after talks.


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