North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un has overseen the test of a new anti-aircraft weapon system, state media said on Saturday, the latest in a series of missile trials as tensions run high on the divided Korean peninsula.
Seoul - North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un has overseen the
test of a new anti-aircraft weapon system, state media said on Saturday,
the latest in a series of missile trials as tensions run high on the
divided Korean peninsula.
Over the past month the young leader has supervised several
military drills, including the test-firings of medium ballistic
missiles, a multiple rocket system and long-range artillery, in response
to Seoul-Washington joint army drills south of the border.
The latest launch came as a two-day nuclear security summit
was being hosted by Barack Obama in Washington, at which North Korea was
the focus of the US president's talks with the leaders of China, South
Korea and Japan.
Pyongyang's official KCNA news agency said Saturday Kim "guided the
test of a new-type anti-air guided weapon system" to check its
capability."Under his observation, AA rockets were fired to accurately hit mock enemy aerial targets", it said.
The South's defence ministry said the North fired an
anti-air missile around 12:45 pm (0345 GMT) Friday from the eastern city
of Sondok.
Kim "expressed great satisfaction over the successful test",
calling it another striking demonstration of the the rapidly growing
defence capability of the country, KCNA said.
Obama spoke Thursday of the need to "vigilantly enforce the
strong UN security measures" imposed on the North after its fourth
nuclear test in January and a subsequent long-range rocket launch.
Pyongyang's state media labelled the summit a "nonsensical"
effort to find fault with the North's "legitimate access to nuclear
weapons".
Existing UN sanctions ban North Korea from conducting any
ballistic missile test, although short-range launches tend to go
unpunished.
- AFP
North Korean leader guides new anti-air weapon system: Pyongyang
Reviewed by Bizpodia
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