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South Korea, Japan Applaud UN Warning to North Korea About Possible
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Nuclear Test
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?r=279&c=646344&l=1009&ctl=1448645:A6F02AD83191E160D9382473492334789574F7DCC14957C0 Pyongyang has so
far remained silent





A North Korean soldier observes the south side through binoculars at
the truce village of Panmunjom in the DMZ (August 2006 file
photo)South Korea and Japan have applauded the U.N. Security Council's
expression of "deep concern" about North Korea's threat to conduct a
nuclear test, and Japan called for "severely punitive measures," if a
test does take place. Pyongyang has so far remained silent. Meanwhile,
tensions were evident, as South Korean troops fired warning shots,
after five North Korean soldiers briefly crossed into the
Demilitarized Zone that divides the peninsula.

Five North Korean soldiers crossed the heavily fortified Demilitarized
Zone that separates the two Koreas, and fled back only when South
Korean soldiers fired warning shots at them.

The South Korean military says only one of the five North Koreans was
armed, and they ignored several warnings over a loudspeaker before the
shots were fired.

A South Korean military official was quoted as saying that it was
unclear whether the action was an intentional provocation, or whether
the men had crossed the line to go fishing.

If it was a provocation, it supported the suggestion by Peter Beck,
North Asia director for the International Crisis Group, that the
U.N.'s Friday statement of concern is unlikely to influence the
North's behavior.

"It's a nice-sounding statement, but it's just that: a statement. It's
not a resolution, there's no explicit enumeration of consequences the
North will face if it does test," he said.

Pyongyang announced this week that it would conduct a nuclear test -
its first - at an unspecified time in the future. The U.N. Security
Council warned against such an act, but stopped short of threatening
new sanctions, if Pyongyang ignores the warning.

Seoul's Foreign Ministry backed the U.N. Saturday, saying the North
must realize a nuclear test "would not give it any benefits."

Japan's Foreign Ministry called on the council to take "severely
punitive measures" against the North, if a test is carried out.
Japan's Nihon Keizai newspaper reported Saturday that Tokyo would seek
to strengthen its own unilateral sanctions against Pyongyang, if the
test went forward.

Japan's new prime minister, Shinzo Abe, is scheduled to visit both
China and South Korea to discuss the North Korean nuclear issue over
the next two days. South Korea says it is sending an envoy to China
next week for the same reason.

Both China and South Korea have been reluctant to pressure North
Korea, hoping instead to influence its behavior through economic
engagement. However, experts say a nuclear test will create intense
pressure for them to adopt a firmer stance toward the North.

The U.N. Security Council took action against North Korea in July,
when it unanimously condemned the North's test launch of at least
seven missiles - again, after it was warned not to do so.

For more than a year, North Korea has boycotted talks at which South
Korea, China, Japan, Russia and the United States have tried to
persuade it to give up its nuclear programs, in exchange for
diplomatic and economic benefits.

Pyongyang says the boycott is a response to sanctions Washington
placed on North Korean financial interests. The United States says
those measures are a law enforcement matter aimed at fighting alleged
money-laundering and counterfeiting by the North, and are not linked
to the six-party talks.