The launch of multiple types of missiles came amid the country’s first confirmed Covid-19 outbreak, which UN agencies said might bring a devastating crisis for its 25 million people.
In its latest firing, North Korea on Wednesday launched three missiles, including its largest intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), Hwasong-17, prompting the United States to call for a vote on Thursday on a UN resolution that would impose tougher sanctions against it.
The launch of multiple types of missiles came amid the country’s first confirmed Covid-19 outbreak, which UN agencies said might bring a devastating crisis for its 25 million people.
The tests show the North is committed to making technical progress on its weapons programmes, analysts say. But South Korea said the second of the three missiles fired on Wednesday, believed to be a KN-23 short-range ballistic missile (SRBM) failed mid-flight.
“Pyongyang appears to have launched different types of missiles, probably in the process of improving related military capabilities,” said Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at Ewha University.”But this also looks like a statement that the Kim Jong-un regime has many different ways of striking an adversary.”
Here are North Korean missile ranges
UN Council to vote against North Korea
The United Nations Security Council will vote on Thursday, at the request of the US, on a resolution aimed at toughening sanctions on North Korea after it fired an intercontinental ballistic missile, reported news agency AFP.
The United States, which holds the rotating Security Council presidency for May, has scheduled the vote for the late afternoon, two diplomats told AFP on condition of anonymity.
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War in Ukraine may trigger global recession, says World Bank chief: Report
Russia’s war on Ukraine could trigger a global recession because of the impact on food, energy and fertiliser prices, with developing nations among the worst affected World Bank president David Malpass said Wednesday. He said that while Ukraine and Russia were expected to see significant contractions, Europe, and the United States were seeing slower growth. On China he said the relatively sharp slowdown was due to the pandemic, inflation and a pre-existing real estate crisis.
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Ukraine exhibits ‘burnt out Russian tanks after invaders left it’ amid war
With the war having entered the fourth month, Ukraine has exhibited Russian tanks and military equipment – burned and destroyed – amid the ongoing fighting between troops of both countries. The tanks are on the display in Mykhailivska Square in the capital city of Kyiv. The pictures of the wreckage were tweeted by the Ministry of foreign affairs, Ukraine on Thursday. Millions of people in war-torn Ukraine have been affected since the war began.
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Four bombs kill at least 16 in Afghanistan
The death toll from four bombs that ripped through minibuses and a mosque in Afghanistan has risen to at least 16, officials said Thursday, with some of the attacks claimed by the Islamic State group. On Wednesday, at least 10 people were killed when three bombs placed on separate minibuses exploded in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif, a health official and police said. Another bomb exploded inside a mosque in the capital Kabul late Wednesday.
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2 Indian satellites to be part of Brics ‘virtual constellation’: Report
India and China are a step closer to working together in space after a joint commission on space cooperation for the Brics bloc was established at a meeting of the top space agencies of Brazil, Russia, India and China, on Wednesday, according to a report by official Chinese media. Two orbiting Indian satellites Resourcesat-2 and 2A will be part of the “virtual constellation of remote sensing satellites”, a data sharing mechanism among the BRICS countries.
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Trudeau cancels in-person appearance at BC fundraiser over security concerns
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was on Tuesday forced to cancel an in-person event with Indo-Canadian supporters of the Liberal Party in the province of British Columbia over security concerns after protesters gathered outside the event venue. Nearly a hundred protesters gathered outside the Aria Banquet Hall in Surrey, a town in the metro Vancouver area, with a large population of Indo-Canadians, where the ruling Party had scheduled a fundraiser.