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USA seeks action to enforce resolutions after North Korea missile launch

President Barack Obama said the USA will team up with South Korea and other allies in efforts to ensure that the latest United Nations sanctions against North Korea’s missile launches are implemented fully.

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The latest incident, condemned in Tuesday’s statement, was the firing of three ballistic missiles into the sea between the peninsula and Japan on Monday, as President Obama joined other G20 leaders at a summit in China.

The single-stage, Rodong-class, mid-range missiles were fired from Hwangju province, North Korea, and flew about 620 miles before falling into waters off the country’s east coast, within Japan’s zone of defense.

Following North Korea’s latest missile launch, the UN Security Council adopted a press statement that strongly criticized the missile launches and called them a “grave violation” of applicable UN resolutions.

“The members of the Security Council deplore all Democratic People’s Republic of Korea ballistic missile activities, including these launches”, the United Nations body said in a statement, using North Korea’s official name.

Malaysia, according to the ministry, urged North Korea to comply fully with the relevant United Nations Security Council resolutions with a view to maintaining regional and global peace and security.

Despite the heavy sanctions, North Korea says the programs are justified because of the threat posed by the US and South Korea.

The Security Council passed sanctions against North Korea on March 2 after Pyongyang conducted its fourth nuclear test in January.

Earlier, France called the tests “extremely concerning” and “a clear and unacceptable new violation of the Security Council resolutions”. China has urged South Korea and the United States to scrap the U.S. Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, or THAAD, saying it is meant to spy on China.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un looks though binoculars at the site of a ballistic missile launching at an undisclosed location in North Korea.

In return, the South-Korean president stated that Seoul will adopt a “strong” attitude regarding any challenges coming from North Korea. This news story is related to Print/148399-North-Korea-missile-tests-deepen-isolation-Obama/ – breaking news, latest news, pakistan ne.

It said the statement “issued a strong warning to North Korea for its continued provocations through ballistic missile launches” and “showed the Security Council’s united will by to change North Korea’s wrongful ways through the faithful implementation of UNSC resolutions”.

The Rodong is a scaled-up Scud variant with a maximum range of around 1,300 kilometres, bringing most of Japan within range. The tests not only threaten Japan’s national security but the region and beyond, he said.

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“We have over many years seen North Korea try to find ways to evade sanctions, try to find ways to access foreign currency, try to find ways to access sensitive technologies using front-companies for their activities”.

Obama condemns North Korea missile launches