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But Seoul's YTN television news network said Thursday that there ae no signs of an imminent long-range missile launch. The reported missile moves came after a North Korean ship -- suspected of possibly carrying illicit weapons -- changed course and was heading back the way it came after remaining under U.S. surveillance for more than a week. The North Korean ship is the first vessel monitored under the new U.N. sanctions that seek to clamp down on Pyongyang's trading of banned arms and weapons-related material by requiring U.N. member states to request inspections of ships suspected of carrying prohibited cargo. The North has said it would consider the interception of its ships a declaration of war. Separately, North and South Korea ended their latest talks over a troubled joint industrial project without progress, and did not set a date for the next round, Unification Ministry spokesman Chun Hae-sung said. The two sides "failed to narrow their differences," during their meeting in the North Korean border city of Kaesong, Chun said. The two Koreas have been at odds over the fate of a South Korean worker who has been detained in the North since March for allegedly denouncing its political system. The North has rejected Seoul's repeated calls for the worker's freedom. It has also demanded that South Korean companies sharply increase wages for North Korean workers and fees paid for the use of the land. As relations with South Korea have deteriorated, the North has halted all key joint projects except for the South Korean-run complex at Kaesong, a prominent symbol of past attempts at reconciliation.
[Associated
Press;
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