North Korea preparing to launch satellite.
North Korea
is preparing to launch a satellite, a Seoul newspaper said Tuesday, as outside
observers warn that the nuclear-armed regime’s space programme is a fig lea
f for
weapons tests.
Pyongyang is
under multiple UN sanctions over its nuclear and missile tests and is
prohibited from carrying out any launch using ballistic missile technology
including satellites.
“Through
various channels, we’ve recently learned that the North has completed a new
satellite and named it Kwangmyongsong-5”, the Joongang Ilbo daily reported,
quoting a South Korean government source.
“Their plan
is to put a satellite equipped with cameras and telecommunication devices into
orbit”, he said.
Pyongyang
launched their Kwangmyongsong-4 satellite in February 2016, which most in the
international community viewed as a disguised ballistic missile test.
A spokesman
for the South Korean military joint chiefs of staff said there was “nothing out
of ordinary at this moment” but added that Seoul was watching out for any
provocative acts “including the test of a long-range missile disguised as a satellite
launch”.
The report
came as the North’s ruling party newspaper Rodong Sinmun reasserted the
regime’s right to launch satellites and develop its space technology.
In a
commentary published on Monday and titled “peaceful space programmes are sovereign
countries’ legitimate rights”, the daily said Pyongyang’s satellite launches
“absolutely correspond” with international laws concerning space development.
At a UN
General Assembly committee meeting in October, North Korea’s deputy UN
ambassador Kim In-Ryong said his country has a 2016-2020 plan to develop
“practical satellites that can contribute to the economic development and
improvement of the people’s living”.
He stressed
North Korea’s right to produce and launch satellites “will not be changed just
because the US denies it”.
North Korea
is believed to have successfully put a satellite into orbit in December 2012
after years of failures dating back to 1998 when it launched a pilot satellite
and named it Kwangmyongsong-1.
Earlier this
month, the Russian newspaper Rossiyskaia Gazeta quoted a Russian military
expert, Vladimir Khrustalev, as saying that North Korea was expected to launch
two satellites — an Earth exploration satellite and a communications satellite
— in the near future.
Khrustalev
made the remark after returning from his week-long trip to North Korea in
mid-November when he met with representatives of the country’s National
Aerospace Development Administration (NADA), the Russian daily said.
Tensions
have soared as the isolated regime has staged a series of atomic and
intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) tests — most recently on November 29.
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