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Japan receives warning from North Korea

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FILE PHOTO: Residents of the South Korean island of Ulleungdo watch file footage of a North Korean missile test. © AFP / Anthony Wallace

Pyongyang claims that the firing of an intermediate-range ballistic missile earlier this month was a warning to the “enemy.”

Japan has been warned by North Korea that it would “pay a severe price” if the alleged mistreatment of its citizens living there persists.

According to the state-run Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), Pyongyang sees the “oppression” of North Koreans in Japan as a threat to its dignity and sovereignty.

The comment likely alluded to claims of an uptick in hate crimes targeting Korean-American students at schools across Japan, according to Yonhap, a South Korean news site.

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The launch of a new type of ground-to-ground intermediate-range ballistic missile on October 4 was declared to be a warning to our adversaries, according to KCNA.

It stated that the effectiveness of the warning would depend on how hostile powers, particularly Japan, acted, saying that Tokyo would “pay a severe price” for any steps taken against North Korea.

Pyongyang conducted another test of its illegal missile capability on October 4 by launching its Hwasong-12 ballistic missile into the Pacific Ocean.
The missile seemed to have flown the furthest of any North Korean missile to date—4,500 kilometres—after flying over Japan and invoking a warning for inhabitants to take cover.

Additionally, Pyongyang launched a missile over Japan for the first time in five years, which was met with condemnation from Tokyo, Seoul, and Washington.

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On Sunday, the leaders of Japan, South Korea, and the US met outside the East Asia Summit in Cambodia and vowed to respond to North Korea’s nuclear and ballistic missile programs in a coordinated and cohesive manner.

As a result of what he called Pyongyang’s “intensifying” provocations, US President Joe Biden stressed that the three countries’ alliance was “even more crucial than it’s ever been.”

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