North Korea has warned the South that it faces ‘final destruction’ – during a UN conference on disarmament.
The open threat came amid growing tensions on the peninsula following the North’s recent nuclear testing.
Since
last week’s test, which was carried out in defiance of UN resolutions,
its southern neighbour warned it could strike if it felt an attack was
imminent.
'No fear': North Korean officials watched
soldiers at a rally organised to celebrate the state's successful
nuclear test last week
In response, North Korean diplomat
Jon Yong Ryong told the UN meeting: ‘As the saying goes, a new-born
puppy knows no fear of a tiger. South Korea’s erratic behaviour would
only herald its final destruction.’
His comments drew quick criticism
from other nations, including South Korea, France, Germany and Britain,
whose ambassador Joanne Adamson said such language was ‘completely
inappropriate’.
‘It cannot be allowed that we have expressions which refer to the possible destruction of UN member states,’ she said.
Pyongyang has said the aim of the
nuclear test was to bolster its defences in the wake the hostility of
the US, which is pushing for sanctions on North Korea.
But the North exercised ‘its maximum
self-restraint’, said Mr Jon, who added that hostility from the US would
leave his country ‘with no option but to take the second and third
stronger steps in succession’. He did not specify what that would
entail.
North Korea has already told China it is prepared to stage one or two more tests this year to force the US into talks.
Spanish ambassador Javier Gil Catalina said the comments had left him stupefied
and appeared to be a breach of international law.
Warning: Soldiers in South Korea - which said in
the wake of its northern neighbour's nuclear test that it could strike
if it believed an attack was imminent - participate in a live fire drill
'In
the 30 years of my career I've never heard anything like it and it
seems to me that we are not speaking about something that is even
admissible, we are speaking about a threat of the use of force that is
prohibited by Article 2.4 of the United Nations charter,' he said.
Since
the North tested a nuclear bomb last week in defiance of U.N.
resolutions, its southern neighbour has warned it could strike the
isolated state if it believed an attack was imminent.
Pyongyang
said the aim of the test was to bolster its defences given the
hostility of the United States, which has led a push to impose sanctions
on North Korea.
'South Korea's erratic behaviour would only herald its final destruction'
North Korean diplomat Jon Yong Ryong
'Our current nuclear test is the
primary countermeasure taken by the DPRK (Democratic People's Republic
of Korea) in which it exercised its maximum self-restraint,' said the
North Korean diplomat Jon.
'If
the U.S. takes a hostile approach toward the DPRK to the last,
rendering the situation complicated, it (North Korea) will be left with
no option but to take the second and third stronger steps in
succession,' he said, without elaborating on what that might entail.
North
Korea has already told key ally China that it is prepared to stage one
or two more tests this year to force the United States into diplomatic
talks, a source with direct knowledge of the message said last week.
U.S.
Ambassador Laura Kennedy said she found North Korea's threat today
profoundly disturbing and later tweeted that it was 'offensive'.
Training: South Korean soldiers fire live rounds during a training exercise in Cheorwon, South Korea
Poland's representative suggested North Korea's participation in the U.N. forum should be limited.
Impoverished and malnourished North Korea is one of the most heavily sanctioned states in the world.
It is still technically at war with South Korea after a 1950-53 civil war ended in a mere truce.
Washington
and its allies are believed to be pushing to tighten the noose around
North Korea's financial transactions in a bid to starve its leadership
of funding.
Jon said
last week's test was an act of self-defence against nuclear blackmail by
the United States, which wanted to block North Korea's economic
development and its fundamental rights.
DAILYMAIL
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