The South Korean government strongly
condemned Pyongyang’s rocket launch as it scrambled to put in place emergency
measures on Friday.
"North
Korea’s launch is a clear violation of the UN Security Council Resolution 1874
that bans any launches using ballistic missile technologies, and a provocative
act that threatens the peace and safety of the Korean Peninsula and Northeast
Asia,” Minister of Foreign Affairs Kim Sung-hwan said.
"The
government strongly denounces North Korea’s new leadership’s decision to push
ahead despite the international community’s unanimous calls to cancel the
launch. North Korea will have to take due responsibility.”
Kim
also said that Seoul is drawing up a comprehensive plan for responding to
further provocations from North Korea, and to nuclear and missile threats.
At 7:39
a.m. on Friday, North Korea launched a long-range rocket carrying a small
satellite from the Dongchang-ri launch facility in North Pyongan Province.
The
rocket, however, failed within two minutes of the launch, and broke up into
about 20 pieces before falling into the West Sea between 100 kilometres and 150
kilometres west of Gunsan, North Jeolla Province.
Soon
after the rocket was detected by the South Korean destroyer Sejong the Great,
various government organs called emergency meetings.
At 9
a.m. President Lee Myung-bak called a meeting of security and foreign affairs
ministers, while the military held a meeting of the emergency management
committee.
South
Korean and US militaries also met to discuss the developments.
"This
is a provocation not only to South Korea but to the international community. It
is also a military threat to South Korea. I think that there needs to be appropriate
international-level restraints,” Minister of National Defence Kim Kwan-jin said
at a meeting with US officials including US Forces Korea commander General
James Thurman.
Other
government organisations without direct security responsibilities also convened
meetings and introduced measures in response to the launch.
The
Bank of Korea began operating a 24-hour emergency monitoring system headed by
Senior Deputy Governor Park Won-shik, while the Ministry of Strategy and
Finance called a meeting of economy and finance-related ministries including
the Ministry of Knowledge Economy, Bank of Korea and the Financial Services
Commission.
Finance
Minister Bahk Jae-wan said that the ministries will analyse the economic impact
of the launch and that they will respond "according to the prepared
manual”.
As a
pan-government effort to handle the situation went under way, the military made
preparations to retrieve the rocket’s debris. However, as debris fell over a
large area, it is unclear when the retrieval process will be completed.
"If
the rocket parts are floating, they will be retrieved immediately, but if they
have sunk, it will require time. We do not know where the debris are, and as
the area is large it’s hard to predict when they will be retrieved,” Defence
Ministry spokesman Kim Min-seok said. The rocket is said to have broken up into
20 pieces before falling into the sea.
Kim
added that as the possibility of the pieces breaking into smaller parts upon
impact cannot be ruled out.
The
military is also closely watching North Korea for possible further
developments.
"The
surveillance assets of Korean and the US forces have been deployed to closely
monitor North Korea’s military movements,” Major General Shin Won-shik said.
"In
addition, we will closely watch for (possible) North Korean military
provocations, additional missile launches and nuclear tests, and maintain firm
readiness posture through close Korea-US cooperation.”
Pyongyang
had warned of a third nuclear test should other countries interfere with the
launch of the rocket through a Japan-based pro-Pyongyang newspaper.
In an
article published on April 5, the paper said that the US appears to want “the
clock to turn back to after April (2009)” saying that North Korea conducted the
second nuclear test in May 2009 as a “self-protective measure in response to UN
Security Council’s sanctions.” In April of that year, the U.N. Security Council
agreed on sanctions in response to the launch of the Kwangmyongsong-2 long
range rocket in April 2009.
Choi
He-suk
The
Korea Herald
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