Graphic toont de Punggye-ri testlocatie en een schematisch overzicht van het tunnelsysteem.
GN37990NL

MILITARY

Noord-Korea’s nucleaire-testlocatie

May 24, 2018 - Een groep internationale journalisten zijn woensdag uit het Noord-Koreaanse Wonsan vertrokken om de ontmanteling bij te wonen van Kim Jong-uns nucleaire-testlocatie, nadat acht Zuid-Koreaanse reporters op het laatste moment toestemming kregen om zich bij de groep te voegen.

The remote site deep in the mountains of the North’s sparsely populated northeast interior is expected to have a formal closing ceremony in the next day or two, depending on the weather.

The closing was announced by North Korean leader Kim Jong-un ahead of his planned summit with U.S. President Donald Trump, scheduled for June 12 in Singapore.

Pyongyang is allowing limited access to the site to publicise its promise to halt underground tests and launches of intercontinental ballistic missiles. However, the plan to show closure of the tunnel complex and command centre to journalists, and not international nuclear inspectors, has been raised as a matter of concern.

The North has conducted six underground tests at the site, including its most powerful ever, estimated at 120 kilotons -- about six-times the destructive power of the “Little Boy” bomb used by the U.S. on the Japanese city of Hiroshima in August 1945.

Sources
PUBLISHED: 23/05/2018; STORY: Graphic News
Advertisement