Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

UN panel issues new sanctions against North Korea

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090717/ap_on_re_us/un_un_north_korea_sanctions

UN panel issues new sanctions against North Korea

By JOHN HEILPRIN, Associated Press Writer Heilprin, Associated Press Writer

– Thu Jul 16, 8:53 pm ET

UNITED NATIONS – The U.N. imposed new sanctions Thursday against five North

Korean officials, four companies and a state agency, and banned imports of two

weapons-making materials, in a rare unified push by the world's powers to thwart

Pyongyang's nuclear ambitions.

The sanctions, which take immediate effect and are to be carried out by all of

the U.N.'s 192 member nations, include travel bans and a freeze on the financial

assets against the officials, companies and state agency. Nations also were

instructed to refrain from supplying North Korea with certain types of graphite

and para-aramid fiber — two of the materials used in ballistic missile parts.

" It is of course significant that we have also put individuals on the list, as

this is the first time. This shows that the sanctions are going on a higher

level at this moment, " said Fazli Corman, Turkey's deputy U.N. ambassador, who

chairs the panel.

The newest sanctions were approved against:

_The General Bureau of Atomic Energy in Pyongyang, the chief agency directing

the North's nuclear program. That includes the Yongbyon Nuclear Research Center

and its plutonium production research reactor, as well as its fuel fabrication

and reprocessing facilities.

_Three Pyongyang-based companies — Namchongang Trading Corp., Korea Hyoksin

Trading Corp., and Korean Tangun Trading Corp. — and one Iranian-based company,

Hong Kong Electronics.

_Yun Ho-Jin, director of Namchongang Trading Corp.; Ri Je-Son, director of the

General Bureau of Atomic Energy; Hwang Sok-Hwa, chief of the bureau's scientific

guidance; Ri Hong-Sop, former director of Yongbyon Nuclear Research Center; and

Han Yu-Ro, director of Korea Ryongaksan General Trading Corp.

_Two types of goods used in ballistic missile parts by North Korea — a graphite

designed or specified for use in electrical discharge machining; and a

para-aramid fiber, filament and tape, which is a Kevlar-like material.

U.S. Ambassador Rice said the United States was pleased with the list,

which required unanimous approval among the 15 nations that make up a sanctions

panel of the U.N.'s powerhouse Security Council. China, North Korea's biggest

ally and trading partner, went along with most of the U.S. recommendations.

The U.S. has launched what it calls a major effort to ensure that U.N. Security

Council Resolution 1874, which along with a previous resolution in 2006 serves

to authorize the latest sanctions, is implemented effectively.

" These new designations — five individuals, five entities and two goods —

strengthen the sanctions regime against North Korea and will serve to constrain

North Korea from engaging in transactions or activities that could fund its WMD

or proliferation activities, " Rice said.

The sanctions panel, which said it plans to add still more names and entities,

has been focused on three areas: sensitive dual-use goods, ballistic

missile-related items and nuclear-related items.

Pak Tok-hun, deputy chief of North Korea's U.N. mission in New York, told South

Korea's Yonhap news agency that the sanctions were " unfair " but said they will

not harm his country.

Pak said North Korea " will not accept Security Council resolutions against the

North and any sanctions under the resolutions, " adding, " Sanctions will not

resolve any problems. "

A U.S. expert on North Korean sanctions said the latest measures — putting the

U.N. seal of approval on measures the U.S. already has prepared to undertake —

are " a modest first step " that might scare off some of North Korea's

weapons-buying customers.

" We're now into a game of Whack-A-Mole, " said Marcus Noland, an economist at

Washington-based Institute for International Economics, referring to

the game in which moles keeping popping up from their holes randomly.

" What's going to happen is that the North Koreans are going to try to

reconstitute their entities and form new shell companies, new front companies,

to continue these activities, " he said. " If there's really going to be

comprehensive efforts on this, they're going to have to go after the financial

intermediaries, some of which are in China, and after the customers. "

North Korea has not indicated how it might react to the sanctions panel's latest

decisions.

But on June 13, North Korea's Foreign Ministry threatened to take

" countermeasures " including accelerating plutonium reprocessing and starting up

uranium enrichment, which would give the regime a second way to make atomic

bombs.

North Korea warned that any attempted blockade of its ships would be considered

" an act of war " that would draw " a decisive military response. " It also has

threatened a " thousand-fold " military retaliation against the U.S. and its

allies if provoked.

Security Council Resolution 1874, approved on June 12, responded to the North's

underground nuclear test blast on May 25. It called for clamping down on alleged

trading of banned arms and weapons-related material and stepped-up inspections

of suspect shipments by sea and air.

Since then, the council also has condemned and expressed " grave concern " over

North Korea's recent firing of seven ballistic missiles on U.S. Independence

Day. The missile launches off the nation's east coast defied three previous

council resolutions and further aggravated tensions already high after North

Korea's May 25 test blast.

Japan, which lives in constant fear of a nuclear-armed North Korea, asked all

Southeast Asian nations, except junta-ruled Myanmar to enforce the U.N.'s North

Korea resolutions.

A North Korean ship, the first to be monitored under the June 12 resolution,

turned back before reaching port, possibly in Myanmar, with its suspected

illicit cargo of weapons.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...