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NKorea vows to build up nuclear deterrent, warns Seoul over PSI

China says never helped NKorea develop nuclear ability
China has never helped North Korea develop its nuclear programmes, a top Chinese atomic energy official said in Beijing on Monday. "China has never had any cooperation with the DPRK (North Korea) in nuclear energy development," Wang Yiren, head of China's Atomic Energy Authority, said in response to a reporter's question. He was speaking on the sidelines of a nuclear energy conference in the Chinese capital. China is the isolated Stalinist state's closest political and economic ally. Trade between the two hit a record 2.79 billion dollars in 2008, up 41 percent from the year before, according to Chinese figures, with exports from China to its neighbour accounting for about two billion dollars of that. The communist regime said last week it would restart its nuclear programmes and abandon six-nation disarmament talks hosted by China to protest a statement from the United Nation's Security Council condemning its April 5 rocket launch. Pyongyang said the rocket put a satellite into orbit, but the United States and its allies believe it was a long-range missile test. The six-nation talks which also include the United States, South Korea, Japan and Russia have sought to put an end to the nuclear capability of North Korea, which detonated an atomic device in 2006.
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) April 18, 2009
North Korea Saturday said it would build up its defence capability including a "nuclear deterrent," accusing the United States and its allies of seeking war against the communist state.

A military spokesman reiterated that the North would consider sanctions or pressure following its recent rocket launch as a declaration of a war.

"Now that the group officially declared confrontation and war against the DPRK (North Korea), its revolutionary armed forces will opt for increasing the nation's defence capability including nuclear deterrent in every way," the spokesman for the General Staff said.

He said the North would not be bound by a 2007 agreement on nuclear disarmament adopted at six-party talks.

The spokesman lashed out at Seoul over its "fellow countrymen" joining international condemnation of the rocket launch while raising no issue with satellite launches by "its masters" the United States and Japan.

He also warned the South over its move to join a US-led initiative to curb trade in weapons of mass destruction.

Amid rising tension, South Korea has delayed a widely expected announcement that it will join the Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI).

"This group (South Korea's conservative government) is unhesitatingly revealing its sinister intention not to rule out even a war ... and blustering that a practical pressure would be put upon the DPRK through South Korea's total participation in the PSI.

"There is no limit to the strike to be made by the revolutionary armed forces of the DPRK," the spokesman was quoted as saying by Pyongyang's official Korean Central News Agency.

"The Lee group of traitors should never forget that Seoul is just 50 kilometres (31 miles) away" from the inter-Korean border, he said.

North Korea, a leading exporter of missiles in recent years, has warned that Seoul's participation would be tantamount to a declaration of a war.

Seoul says Pyongyang has no reason to feel threatened by PSI, which is not aimed at specific countries.

But it has delayed a widely expected announcement of its participation, which was initially planned in the aftermath of the North's controversial rocket launch on April 5.

Tensions remain high over the launch, which the United States and its allies say was a missile test disguised as a satellite launch.

The North Tuesday announced it was quitting six-nation nuclear disarmament talks and would restart nuclear facilities in an angry response to a UN Security Council statement which condemned the rocket launch.

North Korea said Friday the outbreak of a nuclear war on the Korean Peninsula was only "a matter of time" due to what it claimed were efforts by South Korea and the United States to bring it to its knees by force.

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India tests nuclear-capable missile: official
Bhubaneswar, India (AFP) April 15, 2009
India Wednesday successfully tested a short-range nuclear-capable ballistic missile from a facility in eastern Orissa state, defence sources said.







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