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Japan
warns N Korea on missile test
Agencies
Infosearch:
Máximo Tomás
Research
Dept.
La Nueva Cuba
June 18, 2006
Reports
say North Korea may have fuelled a long-range missile ready for
a test flight, prompting Tokyo to warn that any missile falling
on Japan would be considered an attack.
Satellite photographs showed fuel tanks at a missile launch site
in North Korea, South Korea's Yonhap news agency said on Sunday
quoting diplomatic sources in Washington.
The US, Japan
and South Korea have warned North Korea against conducting an intercontinental
ballistic missile test after officials said there were signs a launch
could take place this weekend.
Yonhap quoted
diplomatic sources in Seoul as saying on Saturday that North Korea
could test a Taepodong-2 ballistic missile, with an estimated range
of 3,500km to 4,300km, as early as Sunday or Monday.
The Sankei Shimbun,
a Japanese newspaper, reported that North Korea had directed its
people to raise the national flag and watch a message on state television
on Sunday, and suggested this could be linked to a possible missile
test.
In 1998, North
Korea shocked the world when it fired a Taepodong-1 missile over
Japan and into the Pacific Ocean.
Worst case scenario
On Sunday, Taro
Aso, the Japanese foreign minister, told North Korea that Tokyo
would regard any missile that dropped on Japan as an attack.
North Korea declared last year
that it had nuclear weapons
"The possibility
is not zero of a missile dropping on Japan. That's why we are worried,"
he said.
"We always
have to think of a worst-case scenario."
Kyodo news agency,
quoting unnamed diplomatic sources in New York, said Japan and the
US would seek immediate action by the UN Security Council if North
Korea went ahead with a missile test.
North Korea
last year declared it had nuclear weapons but then reached a broad
agreement to give up its programme in exchange for aid and security
guarantees.
Negotiations,
with six nations including the US and Japan, broke down in November,
with North Korea refusing to return to the table unless the US drops
financial sanctions imposed over alleged counterfeiting and money
laundering.
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