Friday, March 08, 2013
U.N. slaps sanctions on North Korea, Kim visits frontline
By Louis Charbonneau and Jack Kim
UNITED NATIONS/SEOUL (Reuters) - The United Nations imposed new sanctions on North Korea aimed at curtailing its nuclear and ballistic missile programmes and China, the isolated regime's only major ally, said it wanted the measures fully implemented.
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un (front on L) applauds as he is welcomed by members of the military at an undisclosed location, in this still image taken from video shown by North Korea's state-run television KRT on March 8, 2013. REUTERS/KRT via Reuters TV |
The sanctions were approved just hours after North Korea threatened the United States with a pre-emptive nuclear strike, a largely empty warning since experts believe Pyongyang does not have the capability to hit the U.S. mainland.
With tensions high on the Korean peninsula, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un visited military units on the frontline of any potential clash with South Korea and the United States, which has 26,000 troops stationed in the South.
The new U.N. Security Council measures announced on Thursday tighten financial restrictions on North Korea and crack down on its attempts to ship and receive banned cargo.
They were agreed after three weeks of negotiations between the United States and China, which has a history of resisting tough penalties against its impoverished neighbour.
"When North Korea tries to move money to pay for its nuclear and ballistic missile programmes, countries must now block those transfers even if the money is being carried in suitcases full of bulk cash," said the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Susan Rice.
China's U.N. ambassador, Li Baodong, said Beijing wanted "full implementation" of the new resolution.
The success of the new measures, council diplomats said, would depend to a large extent on the willingness of China to enforce them more strictly than it has in the past.
If carried out to the letter that would see China inspecting shipments from major ports such as Dalian, which could be a big blow to Kim, who appears to have risked distancing himself from his sole major ally and trading partner.
In a statement released late on Thursday, China's Foreign Ministry called the sanctions a "necessary and moderate response" to North Korea's February 12 nuclear test.
The U.N. resolution also specifies some luxury items North Korea's elite is not allowed to import but its main aims are to stop financial institutions dealing with North Korea and to staunch the flow of cash flowing into the country into what defectors have dubbed the "royal court" fund, used to finance the Kim family's opulent lifestyle and its nuclear ambitions.
"These sanctions will bite and bite hard," said Rice.
The sanctions were designed to make the punitive measures more like those used against Iran, which Western officials say have been surprisingly successful.
George Lopez, a professor at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana and a former member of the U.N. panel that monitors North Korea sanctions compliance, said the new measures should have a real impact on North Korea's movement of money and constrain access to equipment for its nuclear and missile programmes.
"Now, we may yet see another launch or a bomb test, but over the medium term this resolution will degrade DPRK capabilities to grow its programme," Lopez said, using the acronym for the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
THREATS AND WAR GAMES
Washington said North Korea's nuclear threats would only lead to Pyongyang's further international isolation and declared the United States was "fully capable" of defending itself.
President Barack Obama's administration also said it had reassured South Korea and Japan "at the highest levels" of its commitment to deterrence, through the U.S. nuclear umbrella and missile defence, in the face of the new threats.
North Korea has accused the United States of using military drills in South Korea as a launch pad for a nuclear war and has again scrapped the armistice with Washington that ended hostilities in the 1950-53 Korean War.
Its soaring anti-American rhetoric is seen by experts as a ploy to be taken as a serious threat and to force Washington back to the negotiating table.
"This might have been a workable strategy in the past, but there will be little appetite to negotiate until North Korea shows it is committed to real change," said Matt Stumpf, Washington director of the Asia Society.
A more likely option for Pyongyang than a full-scale conflict is to stage a series of clashes along a disputed frontier with the South, a sea border known as the Northern Limit Line, which has been the scene of previous clashes.
In 2010, the North was widely believed to have sunk a South Korean naval vessel killing 46 sailors, something Pyongyang has denied. In the same year it shelled a South Korean island in the disputed area, killing civilians.
Kim Jong-un visited two military units on islands near the line on Thursday, according to state news agency KCNA, on what it termed "the biggest hotspot" in the waters of the Korean peninsula and where he urged the units to "make the first gunfire" in response to any attack on its territory.
North Korea was conducting a series of military drills and getting ready for state-wide war practice of an unusual scale, South Korea's defence ministry said earlier.
(Additional reporting by Michelle Nichols at the United Nations, Paul Eckert and Anna Yukhananov in Washington and David Chance in Seoul; Editing by Christopher Wilson and Dean Yates)
Related Stories:
North Korea can't hit America, but South Korea and Japan in range
- EC mulls action against those who slandered it
- Unscheduled water disruption in Gombak and KL
- Palanivel: Special team to focus on forest, hill destruction
- Two riders in motorcycle convoy die in mishap
- Student activist Adam Adli remanded 5 days
- Foresty DG: Less than 1% of forest reserves in peninsula affected by illegal logging
- PAS gets four Selangor exco posts
- Dr Chua: Tee’s appointment to Johor exco will be discussed by MCA central committee
- Taib wants infrastructure development issues resolved
- More want English-medium schools option
- Police investigating organisers of Penang thanksgiving ceramah
- Kit Siang slams new IGP for having double standards
- Labourer charged with injuring a man during GE13 campaign period
- Blind student successfully crosses Penang channel
- Karpal tells Tunku Aziz to cease attacks on DAP
- Adrian Cheng: updating a Hong Kong family empire for a changing China
- Wall Street Week Ahead: Correction talk gets old as rally sails along
- China April housing inflation quickens to two year high
- EU cites Chinese telecoms Huawei and ZTE for trade violations
- Yahoo to vote on $1.1 billion Tumblr buy: AllThingsD
- Dow, S&P end at records, stocks mark fourth week of gains
- CEO: Catcha Media won’t be taken private - for now
- Sarawak politically-linked stocks rally
- Jala: GST could add up to RM27b to country’s income
- Analysts say UMW Holdings’ O&G offering was widely anticipated
- Matrix Concepts’ IPO oversubscribed by 11.3 times
- Instacom wins RM200m job?
- SFSS set to be largest shareholder of Bintulu Port
- Northport buys two new quay cranes
- Bursa Malaysia closes on Friday
- Thailand's Red Shirts mark deadly crackdown
- Pakistan's Imran blames rival for killing
- Karachi voters back at polls after ballot stuffing
- Philippines waiting for Taiwan anger to cool
- Russia retrieves mice, newts from space
- 29 killed in South Sudan cattle raid
- Saudi woman creates history by scaling Everest
- Lotto fever strikes US as jackpot swells (Updated)
- Pakistani politician gunned down in Karachi
- Dozens hurt in US road accident, say reports
- Shaky start for favourites China
- Chong Wei continues to stay focused despite all the changes
- Apacs extend Chun Seang’s contract for another year
- Denmark’s Hoyer is new president of the BWF
- Indonesian coach: Individual sponsorship will revive our shuttlers’ fortunes
- Thongchai faces McDowell in Match-Play climax
- Golf: Griffin wins fog-bound SK Telecom Open
- Golf: Choi edges sizzling Nordqvist for LPGA lead
- Poulter angry with himself after World Match-Play exit
- Inconsistent and uncomfortable but Bradley still ahead of pack
- Korda holds off charging Webb to seize the lead
- McIlroy splits with management to go it alone
- Hall of Famer Venturi dies at age 82
- Briton Redding wins French Moto2 GP
- Hafizh struggling with new Kalex bike in Le Mans
- Security guards 'chopped up like meat' at Cheras condo
- Bring back English schools
- Hills in Cameron Highlands ‘raped’ at an alarming rate
- Be wary of banking Trojans
- Retract your statement, Guan Eng urges Zahid
- Student activist Adam Adli arrested over his remarks at May 13 forum
- Karpal tells Tunku Aziz to cease attacks on DAP
- Five men assault friend at Johor police station
- Pakatan ceramah held at Esplanade despite police not approving permit
- All eyes on Najib’s new Cabinet
- Be wary of banking Trojans
- Bring back English schools
- My home, my school
- Security guards 'chopped up like meat' at Cheras condo
- Expert: Be very sure you need a mastectomy
- Blind man wants to raise awareness on retinal diseases
- More want English-medium schools option
- Bring back English schools
- Home garden talk a hit with Malaysians
- Greying China taps rural elderly to care for those even older

