North Korea fires 3 ballistic missiles after reporting COVID outbreak
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[May 12, 2022] By
Hyonhee Shin
SEOUL (Reuters) -North Korea fired three
ballistic missiles toward the sea off its east coast on Thursday, South
Korea said, in the latest such move by the isolated country racing to
advance its weapons programmes on the day it first reported a COVID-19
outbreak.
Japan's coastguard confirmed the launch of a ballistic missile by North
Korea, citing its military. The projectile appeared to fall outside
Japan's exclusive economic zone, public broadcaster NHK said.
South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff said three short-range ballistic
missiles were fired from the Sunan area of the North's capital,
Pyongyang, where an international airport is located and where the North
had said it fired its largest intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM),
the Hwasong-17, on March 24.
The missiles flew approximately 360 kilometres (224 miles), reaching an
altitude of 90 km and a maximum velocity of Mach 5, the Joint Chiefs of
Staff said.
The firing was the first after the inauguration this week of
conservative South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol, who has signalled a
hard line against the North's weapons development.
The launch, the North's 16th known weapons test this year, also came
hours after it reported its first COVID-19 outbreak, declaring a
"gravest national emergency" and ordering a national lockdown.
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A North Korea flag flutters next to concertina wire at the North
Korean embassy in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia March 9, 2017.
REUTERS/Edgar Su
Yoon's national security office issued a statement
condemning the launch and saying it "deplored the duplicitous
conduct" of firing ballistic missiles and ignoring the plight of its
people in the middle of a COVID outbreak.
In its last weapons test on Saturday, the North used a
submarine-launched ballistic missile, which it has been aggressively
developing in recent years.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un vowed late last month to expedite
the country's buildup of nuclear arsenal, amid stalled
denuclearisation talks with the United States.
U.S. and South Korean officials have said Pyongyang's first nuclear
test since 2017 could take place as early as this month.
(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin;Editing by Alison Williams and Bernadette
Baum)
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