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UN experts say North Korea seeks to produce material for nuclear programmes
6 February 2022, 10:14
UN report says there has been ‘a marked acceleration’ of Pyongyang’s testing and demonstration of new short-range and possibly medium-range missiles.
North Korea has continued to develop its nuclear and ballistic missile programmes including its capability to produce nuclear fissile materials in violation of United Nations Security Council resolutions, UN experts say in a new report.
The panel of experts say in the executive summary of the report there was “a marked acceleration” of Pyongyang’s testing and demonstration of new short-range and possibly medium-range missiles in January, “incorporating both ballistic and guidance technologies and using both solid and liquid propellants”.
“New technologies tested included a possible hypersonic guiding warhead and a manoeuverable re-entry vehicle,” the panel said. North Korea also demonstrated “increased capabilities for rapid deployment, wide mobility (including at sea), and improved resilience of its missile forces”.
The experts said North Korea “continued to seek material, technology and know-how for these programmes overseas, including through cyber means and joint scientific research.”
A year ago, the panel said North Korea had modernised its nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles by flaunting United Nations sanctions, using cyberattacks to help finance its programmes and continuing to seek material and technology overseas for its arsenal including in Iran.
“Cyberattacks, particularly on cryptocurrency assets, remain an important revenue source” for Kim Jong Un’s government, the experts monitoring the implementation of sanctions against the North said in the new report.
In recent months, North Korea has launched a variety of weapons systems and threatened to lift the four-year moratorium on more serious weapons tests such as nuclear explosions and ICBM launches.
January saw a record nine missile launches, and other weapons it recently tested include a developmental hypersonic missile and a submarine-launched missile.
The Security Council initially imposed sanctions on North Korea after its first nuclear test explosion in 2006 and made them tougher in response to further nuclear tests and the country’s increasingly sophisticated nuclear and ballistic missile programmes.
The panel of experts said North Korea’s blockade aimed at preventing Covid-19 resulted in “historically low levels” of people and goods entering and leaving the country.
The panel has previously made clear that North Korea remains able to evade sanctions and to illicitly import refined petroleum, access international banking channels and carry out “malicious cyber activities”.
UN sanctions ban North Korean coal exports and the experts said in the new report that although coal exports by sea increased in the second half of 2021, “they were still at relatively low levels”.
“The quantity of illicit imports of refined petroleum increased sharply in the same period, but at a much lower level than in previous years,” the panel said.
The experts said North Korea also continues to evade maritime sanctions “by deliberately obfuscated financial and ownership networks”.