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Video:
DPRK test-fires 6 missiles
Global outcry over DPRK
launches
 File photo shows DPRK's Taepodong 2 missile. (File Photo) |
 Photo released by the US media on May 24, 2006 shows the
missile launch control center in DPRK. CNN reported DPRK has test
fired at least three missiles and possibly a fourth including a long-range
Taepodong 2 missile. (Xinhua Photo) |
PYONGYANG, July 6 (Xinhua) -- A spokesman for the DPRK
Foreign Ministry confirmed Thursday that the Democratic People's Republic of
Korea (DPRK) had test-fired missiles, saying the missile launches were part of
the routine military exercises aimed at increasing the nation's military
capacity for self-defense.
The spokesman said in a statement that the DPRK
remains unchanged in its will to denuclearize the Korean Peninsula in a
negotiated peaceful manner just as it committed itself in the Sept. 19 joint
statement of the six-party talks, the official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA)
reported.
The latest missile launch exercises are quite
irrelevant to the six-party talks, the statement said.
The KCNA also quoted the spokesman as saying that the
missile launches were "successful" and that "the DPRK's exercise of its
legitimate right as a sovereign state is neither bound to any international law
nor to bilateral or multilateral agreements such as DPRK-Japan Pyongyang
Declaration and the joint statement of the six-party talks."
"The missile test moratorium reached between the DPRK
and the United States in 1999 was valid only when the DPRK-U.S. dialogue was
under way," it said.
The Bush administration, however, has scrapped all
the agreements its preceding governments reached with the DPRK and "totally
scuttled" the bilateral dialogue, said the statement.
It noted it was the same case with the DPRK-Japan
Pyongyang Declaration in 2002 on the long-range missile test-fire.
In the Declaration, the DPRK expressed its "intention
to extend beyond 2003 the moratorium on the missile fire," a step taken on the
premise that Japan moved to "normalize its relations with the DPRK and redeem
its past, the statement said.
However, the Japanese authorities didn't honor their
commitment. Moreover, they have pursued a hostile policy toward the DPRK
together with the U.S. and chosen to internationalize the "abduction issue"
although the DPRK had fully settled the issue.
"It is a manifestation of the DPRK's broad
magnanimity that it has put on hold the missile launch so far under this
situation," the statement added.
It also said the joint statement released after the
six-party talks in Beijing last September, which involves the DPRK, South Korea,
China, Japan, Russia and the United States, has stipulated the commitments to be
fulfilled by the six sides to the talks to denuclearize the Korean Peninsula.
But Washington imposed financial sanctions against
the DPRK soon after the meeting and continued putting pressures on it on all
fronts, said the statement.
"It is clear to everyone that there is no need for
the DPRK to unilaterally put on hold the missile launch under such situation,"
the statement said.
The spokesman also said the Korean People's Army will
go on with missile launch exercises as part of its efforts to bolster deterrent
for self-defense in the future, the statement added.
Defense and intelligence officials in Seoul, Tokyo
and Washington were quoted by media as saying that the DPRK test-fired seven
missiles of different ranges on Wednesday. Enditem
Related:
China expresses serious concern
over DPRK's missile test-firing
BEIJING, July 5 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao
said here Wednesday that China is "seriously concerned" over the tensions caused
by the missile test-firing by the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK).
"We are seriously concerned with what had happened,"
Liu said in a press release.
He urged the parties concerned to keep calm and
exercise restraint, make more efforts to promote peace and stability in the
Korean Peninsula and the northeast Asia and avoid actions that further intensify
and complicate the situation.
DPRK confirms it has tested
missiles
PYONGYANG, July 6
(Xinhua) -- The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) confirmed on
Thursday that it has tested missiles, calling them routine military drills aimed
at strengthening the country's defense.
A DPRK Foreign Ministry spokesman said in a statement that
the country would continue to launch missiles, the official Korean Central News
Agency reported.
The missile launches have nothing to do with the six-party
talks on the Korean peninsula nuclear issue, it said.
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