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WorldNorth Korean missile lands near South Korean waters for the first time

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North Korean missile lands near South Korean waters for the first time

North Korea has launched the most missiles in a single day, and a ballistic missile has landed near South Korean waters for the first time since the countries’ division in 1948.

North Korea launched at least 17 missiles off its eastern and western coasts on Wednesday morning, with one landing near the rivals’ tense sea border, according to South Korea’s military.

Seoul responded quickly by launching missiles.

It was the most missiles fired by the North in a single day – and the first time a ballistic missile had landed near the South’s waters since the countries’ division in 1948.

“This is unprecedented and we will never tolerate it,” South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said.

The missile landed outside South Korea’s territorial waters, but south of the Northern Limit Line (NLL), a disputed inter-Korean maritime border.

It landed 35 miles from the South Korean city of Sokcho, on the east coast, and 100 miles from the island of Ulleung, where air raid warnings were issued.

“We heard the siren at around 8.55 am and all of us in the building went down to the evacuation place in the basement,” an Ulleung county official said.

“We stayed there until we came upstairs at around 9.15 am after hearing that the projectile fell into the high seas.”

Yoon Suk-yeol, the South Korean president, said it was an “effective act of territorial encroachment”.

South Korean warplanes fired three air-to-ground missiles into the sea across the NLL after Mr Yoon’s office pledged a “swift and firm response” so Pyongyang “pays the price for provocation”.

South Korea is in a period of national mourning after more than 150 people were killed in a deadly crowd crush in the capital, Seoul.

Hours before the missiles were launched, the North threatened to use nuclear weapons to get the US and South Korea to “pay the most horrible price in history” in protest over the two nations’ ongoing military drills that it views as an invasion rehearsal.

Washington said the drills were “purely defensive in nature” and that the US had made clear to North Korea that it harbored no hostile intent towards the country.

Today’s ballistic missile launches mark another step in what feels like an incremental but steady increase of tensions in the Korean Peninsula.

Not only was this the closest a North Korean missile has come to the South Korean shore since the countries’ division in 1948, but it also comes shortly after its longest known missile flight yet over Japan in early October.

 

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