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Wednesday, March 2, 2016

North Korea 'fires projectiles' into sea hours after UN vote

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Media captionSteve Evans reports on how sanctions might affect North Korea
North Korea has fired several short-range projectiles into the sea, South Korea's defence ministry said.

It comes hours after the UN Security Council unanimously voted to impose some of its strongest ever sanctions against North Korea.
A South Korean spokesman told the Yonhap news agency the projectiles were fired at about 10:00 local time (01:00 GMT) from Wonsan on the east coast.
He said they were still trying to determine exactly what was fired.
Yonhap quoted officials as saying all the objects fell into the sea.

'Speaking with one voice'

The new UN measures are a response to North Korea's recent nuclear test and satellite launch, both of which violated existing sanctions.

The United Nations Security Council unanimously approves sanctions against North Korea at the UN headquarters in New York (02 March 2016)

Image copyright EPA
Image caption The vote against North Korea at the Security Council was overwhelming
They will result in all cargo going to and from the country being inspected, while 16 new individuals and 12 organisations have been blacklisted.
The United States and North Korea's long-standing ally China spent seven weeks discussing the new sanctions.
In addition to the mandatory cargo inspections the sanctions also include a ban on all sales or transfers of small arms and light weapons to North Korea, and expulsion of diplomats from the North who engage in "illicit activities".
US President Barack Obama said the international community was "speaking with one voice" to tell the North it "must abandon these dangerous programmes and choose a better path for its people".
South Korea's President Park Geun-hye welcomed the sanctions, saying she hoped the North "will now abandon its nuclear development programme and embark on a path of change".
North Korea insists its missile programme is purely scientific in nature, but the US, South Korea and even its ally China say such launches like the one which put a satellite in orbit last month are aimed at developing inter-continental ballistic missiles.
The North claimed its January nuclear test - the fourth since 2006 - was a test of its hydrogen bomb technology.North Korean border guards at Panmunjon truce village (3 March 2016)

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