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NUKEWARS
Rice paddies and rocketry: a journey through North Korea
by Staff Writers
Tongchang-Ri Space Centre, North Korea (AFP) April 9, 2012

North Korean soldiers wait to check journalists as they arrive at the Tongchang-ri space center in North Phyongan Province on the west coast on April 8, 2012 North Korea is counting down to the 100th anniversary of its founder's birth Kim Il-Sung on April 15 with top-level meetings and a controversial rocket launch scheduled in coming days to bolster his grandson's credentials. Photo courtesy AFP.

North Korea is hardly known for offering a warm welcome to the world's press, and never before has it given access to a sensitive site featuring its latest space hardware.

However, insistent that its upcoming rocket launch poses no offensive threat, the communist state invited some 50 reporters, cameramen and photographers on Sunday to view the brand-new launch site in its far northwest.

The journey by train from the showpiece capital Pyongyang took the media contingent through the world's most secretive country, a nuclear power where food shortages persist since a 1990s famine killed hundreds of thousands.

But North Korea, under the new leadership of Kim Jong-Un, has invited the world media to come in force as it gears up for this weekend's 100th anniversary of the birth of its founding leader, Kim's grandfather Kim Il-Sung.

To honour the anniversary, North Korea says, the rocket will place a research satellite called Kwangmyongsong-3 (Shining Star) in orbit sometime between April 12 and 16.

The United States, South Korea and others insist that the launch is a ballistic missile test in disguise, in flagrant violation of a UN ban. Japan has deployed anti-missile systems to shoot down the rocket if necessary.

The journey to the launch site starts at 8:30am with minders shepherding the press contingent from their Pyongyang hotel onto buses with this stern instruction: "From now on, you need our permission to film or take photos."

But the hunger for images from North Korea is so ravenous that as soon as the buses begin to move, everyone gets out their equipment and starts shooting. Against all expectation, the minders do not intervene.

The buses head past Pyongyang's main train station, watched over by a giant portrait of Kim Il-Sung, and reach what appears to be a private station. The buses pull up directly onto the platform.

The young new leader's father Kim Jong-Il, who died in December, had a reported fear of flying and went everywhere in a special train fitted out in high style. This private station could well be the one that Kim used.

Equipped with sleeper carriages, the comfortable train awaiting the media certainly seems reserved for the regime's elite, with catering provided by the national airline Air Koryo. It is a far cry from the rickety train that brought two AFP journalists to Pyongyang from Dandong in China.

In barely no time, the train has left Pyongyang behind. Fields open up, dotted with villages featuring white-walled houses and pagoda-style roofs with brown-ochre tiles.

Tractors are a rare sight in the fields and rice paddies that line the twin-track railway. Most North Koreans still live on the land, and most still farm by hand or with oxen.

There are plenty of women and children tilling the fields or washing their rice crops. Most appear suitably dressed against the spring chill, and have footwear on.

This part of North Korea, in the northwest, is far more privileged than the northeast, where UN agencies say that malnutrition remains chronic.

After about four hours, the train reaches a town called Tongnim, about 50 kilometres (30 miles) from the Chinese border. It leaves the main railway and heads down a single track to the Cholsan peninsula on the Yellow Sea.

Rice fields remain the norm alongside the track but here, the tractors are newer and a lot more common. This region serving the Tongchang-ri space centre is, clearly, even better endowed with state resources.

The train comes to a halt after another hour. The countryside is now deserted.

In the distance between two hills, standing clearly in the brilliant spring sunshine, is the journey's end: the three-stage rocket on its launch platform. The media scrum pushes for the windows to grab a shot.

The white rocket stands 30 metres (99 feet) high. On the main booster section, in sky-blue lettering, is written in Korean "Unha 3", or Galaxy 3. Above the lettering is painted the North Korean flag.

A small, smiling man welcomes the media. Jang Myong-Jin, the 46-year-old chief of the space centre, holds court for about three hours, answering a battery of questions without losing his composure.

Jang is adamant that the launch is entirely peaceful, a proof of North Korean engineering prowess, and that no other country has any right to interfere.

So ends a carefully choreographed visit at the start of what promises to be a week of stage-managed events in Pyongyang and beyond, designed to entrench the deeply isolated nation's second dynastic succession.

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US sees 'additional steps' toward NKorea rocket launch
Washington (AFP) April 9, 2012 - North Korea has taken "additional steps" towards the launch of a long-range rocket despite international pressure against it, the Pentagon said Monday.

"We believe they've taken additional steps for a possible launch," Pentagon spokesman George Little told reporters, adding that any such test "would be a violation of North Korea's international obligations."

Pyongyang says the rocket launch is to put into space a satellite to mark the 100th birth anniversary of secretive Stalinist state's founder Kim Il-Sung.

In an unprecedented move, North Korea on Sunday invited foreign journalists to the rocket launch site to try to persuade the world of its peaceful intentions.

The United States says the satellite launch is a cover for testing a long-range ballistic missile in defiance of UN resolutions and a US-North Korean agreement.

In response to the planned launch, the United States last month dropped plans to provide 240,000 metric tons of food aid for North Korea.

South Korean officials believe that the launch is scheduled for sometime between April 12 and 16.

US urges China to press NKorea to nix rocket launch
Washington (AFP) April 9, 2012 - The US State Department said Monday it is urging China to press North Korea in "the hours and days ahead" not to go ahead with a planned rocket launch, seen as a disguised missile test.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland also told reporters that Japan and any other regional countries have the right to defend themselves when asked about Japan's preparing to shoot down the rocket if it threatens its territory.

"We continue to encourage China to do all that it can. And we are hopeful they will continue to use their influence in the hours and days ahead," Nuland said when speaking of China's influence with Pyongyang over the planned rocket launch.

China is considered to have the most influence with North Korea as a member of the six-party nuclear disarmament talks that includes those two countries as well as the United States, Japan, South Korea and Russia.

"North Korea's launch of a missile would be highly provocative, it would pose a threat to regional security, and it will be inconsistent with its recent undertakings to refrain from any kind of long-range missile launches," she said.

She said the United States also considers such a launch as a violation of UN Security Council Resolutions 1718 and 1874.

"So we are continuing to make the point that it is a bad idea to do this," Nuland said.

"We are also working with our six-party counterparts to try to make the same points to North Korea and to urge all of the countries in the six-party talks to use their influence with the DPRK (North Korea)," she said.

She singled out China when she appealed for it to use its influence in particular to halt the launch scheduled for sometime between April 12-16.

A South Korean official said the North appeared to be preparing to follow up the launch with a third nuclear weapons test, something Nuland said would be "equally bad if not worse."

Japan meanwhile has deployed missile batteries in central Tokyo and dispatched destroyers after Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda gave the green light to shoot down the rocket if it threatens Japan's territory.

"Our position, as you know, has been that Japan, Korea, any of the countries in the region obviously have the right to self-defend," Nuland said when asked about Japan's plans.



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NUKEWARS
N. Korea preparing for third nuclear test: report
Seoul (AFP) April 8, 2012
North Korea appears to be preparing for a third nuclear test after a long-range rocket launch planned for this month, a report said Sunday. Preparations are underway in the northeastern town of Punggye-ri, where the North carried out two previous tests in 2006 and 2009, Yonhap news agency said, citing a Seoul intelligence official. "Recent satellite images led us to conclude the North ha ... read more


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