North Korea's top envoy to a leading U.N. disarmament body says his country "categorically" rejects a U.N. Security Council resolution imposing new sanctions over its nuclear and missile programs.
Ambassador Han Tae Song also lashed out at the United States during a
plenary session of the U.N.'s Conference on Disarmament, saying North
Korea denounces Washington's "evil intention" and would "make sure the
U.S. pays a due price."
The comments Tuesday came as North Korea faced renewed criticism at
the Geneva-based body of its recent ballistic missile and nuclear
weapons tests. Peru's envoy, Maria Antonia Masana Garcia, said North
Korea's ambassador to her country would be considered persona non grata.
U.S. Ambassador Robert Wood hailed the Security Council sanctions
imposed Monday, saying "the international community will never accept
North Korea as a nuclear weapons state."
2 p.m.:
North Korea will be feeling the pain of new United Nations sanctions
targeting some of its biggest remaining foreign revenue streams. But the
Security Council eased off the biggest target of all: the oil the North
needs to stay alive, and to fuel its million-man military.
Though the United States had proposed a complete ban, the sanctions by
the U.N. Security Council to punish North Korea for its sixth nuclear
test cap Pyongyang's annual imports of crude oil at the same level they
have been for the past 12 months: an estimated 4 million barrels.
The measures were approved unanimously on Monday.
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