Major blast in N Korea reported, huge mushroom cloud seen

srirangan

Banned Member
http://abcnews.go.com/wire/World/ap20040912_122.html


Blast, Mushroom Cloud Reported in N. Korea
Explosion Followed by Mushroom Cloud Reported in North Korea on Key Communist Regime Date

The Associated Press


SEOUL, South Korea Sept. 12, 2004 — A large explosion occurred in the northern part of North Korea, sending a huge column of smoke into the air on an important anniversary of the communist regime, a South Korean news agency reported Sunday.

The South Korean government said it was trying to confirm the report of an explosion at 11 a.m. on Thursday in Yanggang province near the border with China.

The Yonhap news agency carried conflicting reports from unidentified sources, with one in Washington saying the incident could be related to a natural disaster such as a forest fire. It also cited a diplomatic source in Seoul as raising the possibility of an accident or a nuclear test.

Although North Korea is believed to be developing nuclear weapons, international experts would likely have been able to detect the test if one had occurred several days ago.

"We understand that a mushroom-shaped cloud about 3.5- to 4-kilometer (2.2 miles to 2.5 miles) in diameter was monitored during the explosion," the source in Seoul told Yonhap. Yonhap described the source as "reliable."

Thursday was the anniversary of North Korea's founding on Sept. 9, 1948. Leader Kim Jong Il uses the occasion to stage performances and other events to bolster loyalty among the impoverished North Korean population.

Experts have speculated that North Korea might use a major anniversary to conduct a nuclear-related test, but one analyst said an open test, as opposed to one below ground, would be hard in such a small country.

"It's difficult to say, but it won't be easy for North Korea to conduct a nuclear test without resulting in massive losses of its own people," said Koh Yu-hwan, a North Korea expert in Seoul. "I think there is a more possibility that it is a simple accident, rather than a deliberate nuclear test."

Yonhap's diplomatic source in Seoul said the explosion took place "not far" from a military base that holds ballistic missiles. North Korea, which has a large missile arsenal and more than a million soldiers, is dotted with military installations.

The damage and crater left by the explosion in Kim Hyong Jik county was big enough to be noticed by a satellite, a source in Beijing told Yonhap.

After a National Security Council meeting, South Korea's Unification Minister Chung Dong-young said the government was trying to confirm the report about the explosion. Asked about the possibility of a nuclear test, he said:

"I believe some foreign media made such reports. However, currently, we believe that it is not related to such reports."

On Saturday, North Korea said recent revelations that South Korea conducted secret nuclear experiments involving uranium and plutonium made the communist state more determined to pursue its own nuclear programs.

The South Korean experiments, conducted in 1982 and 2000, were likely to further complicate the already stalled six-nation talks aimed at dismantling the North's nuclear development. South Korea has said the experiments were purely for research and did not reflect a desire to develop weapons.

On April 22, train wagons at a railway station exploded in the North Korean town of Ryongchon, killing 160 people and injuring an estimated 1,300, according to some estimates. The blast was believed to have been sparked by a train laden with oil and chemicals that hit power lines.

The explosion on Thursday was bigger than the Ryongchon train explosion, which devastated a wide area, Yonhap said.

Copyright 2004 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
 

srirangan

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http://www.reuters.co.uk/newsPackageArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=581653&section=news

N.Korea blast near missile base
Sun 12 September, 2004 07:55

By Paul Eckert

SEOUL (Reuters) - The region in North Korea believed to have been hit by a huge blast on September 9 is home to a underground missile base that was listed as a possible uranium enrichment site, according to a disarmament think tank.

Kimhyungjik county, where a large explosion was recorded on Thursday, hosts the Yongjori Missile Base, an underground base thought to hold missiles and launchers, according to the Nuclear Threat Initiative (NTI) database.

There has been no confirmation of the location or nature of the explosion in Ryanggang province, a remote and mountainous region which Western defence experts believe houses key military sites. It is off-limits to outsiders, including aid agencies.

Kimhyungjik county is named after leader Kim Jong-il's grandfather and sits right on the border with China.

Yongjori base, which lies about 20 km (12.4 miles) from the Chinese border, consists of a dozen tunnels for storing, deploying and launching medium-range missiles that are capable of hitting Japan, NTI said.

The NTI website (http//nti.org), which lists known or suspected weapons sites in North Korea and other countries, cites testimony by a North Korean defector as saying 12 tunnels at the base could hold 36 missiles. The base was completed in recent years, it said.

The base, run by the missile division of North Korea's National Defence Commission, is one of three suspected locations of North Korean plants for enriching uranium, the NTI said.

"It is unclear whether U.S. officials have identified a separate facility in Yongjori dedicated to uranium enrichment, or if the site previously identified as a missile base is a uranium enrichment facility instead," says the NTI web site.

North Korea's suspected secret programme to enrich uranium for weapons was the catalyst for a two-year diplomatic standoff with the United States and regional powers. North Korea denies it has a programme to enrich uranium.

A Western diplomat in Seoul said it was too early to draw a conclusion on the blast, but suggested several possibilities.

"It could be a missile engine test, which they do periodically, going wrong like it did back in 2002, when the whole stand blew up," the diplomat said, referring to a previously reported blast.

The diplomat, noting longstanding U.S. suspicions about sites in that area, said the blast could be connected to "suggestions that North Korea has been experimenting with high explosives as the precursor for a nuclear weapon".

"On the other hand, this could be another huge industrial accident. They have fourth-world safety standards," said the diplomat," speaking on condition of anonymity.

--

so have they tested it?
 

srirangan

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N. Korea explosion arouses nuclear fears
http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/world/9642040.htm

A North Korean blast created a large mushroom cloud and left a crater large enough to be seen by a satellite, a South Korean news report said.

Associated Press

SEOUL, South Korea - A large explosion occurred in the northern part of North Korea, sending a huge mushroom cloud into the air on an important anniversary of the communist regime, a South Korean news agency reported Sunday.

The South Korean government said it was trying to confirm the report. The Yonhap news agency, citing an unidentified diplomatic source in Seoul, said the explosion happened at 11 a.m. local time Thursday in Yanggang province near the border with China. The blast left a crater big enough to be noticed by a satellite, the source said.

''We understand that a mushroom-shaped cloud about 3.5- to 4-kilometer [2.2 miles to 2.5 miles] in diameter was monitored during the explosion,'' the source said. Yonhap described the source as ``reliable.''

Thursday was the anniversary of the 1948 foundation of the communist regime. Leader Kim Jong Il uses the occasion to stage performances and other events to bolster loyalty among the impoverished North Korean population.

Experts have speculated that North Korea might use a major anniversary to conduct a nuclear-related test, though there was no immediate indication that the reported explosion on Thursday was linked to Pyongyang's efforts to develop nuclear weapons.

''It remains unclear whether it was a deliberately planned nuclear test or it was just an accident,'' the source in Seoul told Yonhap. ``But it doesn't seem to be an ordinary explosion.''

The source said the explosion took place ''not far'' from a military base that holds North Korea's Taepo-dong ballistic missiles.

North Korea was founded on Sept. 9, 1948. Leader Kim Jong Il uses the anniversary to stage performances and other events to bolster loyalty among the impoverished North Korean population.

South Korea's Unification Minister Chung Dong-young said the government was trying to confirm the report.

''I am not aware of details such as the size of the damage,'' he was quoted as saying by Yonhap after a National Security Council meeting.

On Saturday, North Korea said recent revelations that South Korea conducted secret nuclear experiments involving uranium and plutonium made the communist state more determined to pursue its own nuclear programs. The White House had received intelligence reports in recent days describing a confusing series of actions by North Korea that some experts believed indicated the country was preparing its first test explosion of a nuclear weapon, senior officials said in interviews Friday and Saturday.
 

webmaster

Troll Hunter
Staff member
Most likely a dirty bomb went off!

N.Korea blast near missile base

SEOUL (Reuters) - The region in North Korea believed to have been hit by a huge blast on September 9 is home to a underground missile base that was listed as a possible uranium enrichment site, according to a disarmament think tank.

Kimhyungjik county, where a large explosion was recorded on Thursday, hosts the Yongjori Missile Base, an underground base thought to hold missiles and launchers, according to the Nuclear Threat Initiative (NTI) database.
Detailed Story
 

srirangan

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Web your first post makes it sound like an accident and not a test; a nuke accident could mean heavy casualities and contamination. From what I've read today's blast seems to near the Chinese border, so if it indeed was intentional test, then China won't be happy that it was carried out near the border; and if it was an accident then contamination could spready very well into China and prolly Russia.

Still very early though, will wait for more detailed reports.
 

P.A.F

New Member
North korea did not test Nuke.

North Korea has not conducted nuclear test: Powell
(Updated at 1800 PST)
WASHINGTON: US Secretary of State Colin Powell said Sunday that North Korea has not conducted a nuclear test to the best of US knowledge and belief.

Speaking on a US television program Powell said: The activity reported today was not conclusive if they were to do one, their neighbors would be perhaps more upset than the United States would be, he added.

Powell was referring to a report by South Korean news agency that a huge explosion rocked North Korea's northern inland province of Ryanggang last week, triggering a mushroom-shaped cloud near the country's secret underground military base.

South Korean officials said Sunday the blast was not likely linked to a nuclear test.

http://www.jang.com.pk/thenews/sep2004-daily/12-09-2004/main/update.shtml#15
 

P.A.F

New Member
Re: North korea did not test Nuke.

N Korea blast unlikely to have been atomic: S Korea
(Updated at 1000 PST)
SEOUL: A huge blast three days ago in North Korea was unlikely to have been a nuclear weapons test, South Korea's unification minister said on Sunday.

According to local news agency, Chung Dong-young told South Korean reporters after a National Security Council meeting that Seoul's assessment so far was the explosion was unlikely to have been linked to the North's nuclear arms ambitions.

http://www.jang.com.pk/thenews/sep2004-daily/12-09-2004/main/update.shtml#03
 

yasin_khan

New Member
N Korea blast 'was not nuclear'

The United States and South Korea have played down suggestions that a massive explosion in North Korea last week was caused by a nuclear device.
The blast in Yanggang Province, close to the Chinese border, is said to have happened on Thursday as the Stalinist state celebrated its National Day.

The blast created what officials in Seoul say was a peculiar-shaped cloud.

As the secretive North stays silent on the blast, a visiting UK minister has asked for an urgent explanation. An unnamed diplomatic source, who spoke to South Korean news agency Yonhap in Beijing, said a cloud with a radius of up to 4km (2.5 miles) had been spotted in Yanggang's Kimhyungjik County.

The area is mountainous and thinly populated, and home to an underground military base known to contain medium-range missiles.

There has been no comment on the incident so far from either North Korea or its closest ally, China.

In April, an explosion at a railway station in North Korea killed more than 150 people - but Pyongyang only admitted the incident three days later.

'Not a test'

US Secretary of State Colin Powell said he did not believe the blast was connected to North Korea's nuclear programme.
There was no indication that was a nuclear event of any kind. Exactly what it was, we're not sure," Mr Powell told ABC television on Sunday.

The BBC's Charles Scanlon, in Seoul, said the South Korean government had confirmed the explosion but was still assessing satellite images of the blast.


The South Korean president's office told AFP news agency: "Our government information for now shows North Korea has not conducted any nuclear test.

"We are trying to confirm whether it is fireworks, a fire in mountains or an accidental explosion."

It was unlikely that North Korea would have carried out a nuclear test so close to the border with China, our correspondent says.

He adds that the US suspects that the closed region where the blast occurred may be where the North is conducting an alleged uranium enrichment programme.

Diplomatic pressure

UK Foreign Office Minister Bill Rammell has demanded an immediate explanation from the North's foreign ministry.

Mr Rammell told the BBC he would also be pressing the North to rejoin the "six-party" international talks - involving both Koreas, the US, China, Russia and Japan.

"I think this is going to be a long haul and it's about trying to pull North Korea back from complete isolation," he added.

The authorities there have been under huge international pressure to end all nuclear programmes and disarm, but have offered only limited concessions in the three rounds of six-party talks to date.

They have not so far committed to attending a fourth round, which the Chinese, as hosts, wanted to start before the end of this month.

On Saturday, the North's foreign ministry said reports of nuclear experiments in the South made it even more determined to pursue its own programme.



http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/3648794.stm
 
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