Pressure grows on China to rein in North Korea; S Korea launches propaganda barrage
Seoul: South Korea unleashed an ear-splitting propaganda barrage across its border with North Korea on Friday in retaliation for its nuclear test, while the United States called on China to end "business as usual" with its ally.
The broadcasts, in rolling bursts from walls of loudspeakers at 11 locations along the heavily militarised border, blared rhetoric critical of the
Wednesday's nuclear test angered both the United States and China, which was not given prior notice, although the US government and weapons experts doubt Pyongyang's claim that the device it set off was a hydrogen bomb.
"Achieving denuclearisation of the
The North agreed to end its nuclear programme in international negotiations in 2005 but later walked away from the deal.
US Secretary of State John Kerry said on Thursday that he had told Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi that
Approach has not worked
"
In a call on Friday with his South Korean counterpart, Yun Byung-se, Wang said talks on the issue should be resumed as soon as possible,
The head of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization (CTBTO), which uses monitoring stations around the world to detect atomic tests, said only "normal" levels of xenon had been detected, at a site in
"Xenon readings at 1st station downwind of #DPRK test site RN38 Takasaki #Japan at normal concentrations. Sampling continues," the CTBTO's executive secretary, Lassina Zerbo, said on Twitter on Friday evening.
The presence of xenon would not indicate whether the blast was from a hydrogen device or a simpler fission explosion.
Seismic waves created by the blast were almost identical to those generated in North Korea's last nuclear test in 2013, Jeffrey Park, a seismologist at Yale University, wrote in a post on the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists website, adding to scepticism about the hydrogen bomb claim.