North Korea Accuses UN of Double Standard Over Missile Firings

North Korea on Monday accused the United Nations of a “double standard” over its reaction to the North’s recent missile launches, warning it of a serious consequence.
Last week, North Korea
fired two short-range ballistic missiles into the sea in a defiance of U.N.
resolutions that ban such launches by North Korea. The U.N. Security Council
subsequently adopted a resolution to renew the mandate of U.N. experts
monitoring sanctions against North Korea.
Some experts say North
Korea's missile launches, the first of their kind in a year, were aimed at
applying pressure on the new U.S. government of President Joe Biden.
“It constitutes a denial of
sovereignty and an apparent double standard that the UNSC takes issue, on the
basis of the U.N. ‘resolutions’ — direct products of the U.S. hostile policy
toward (North Korea),” senior North Korean Foreign Ministry official Jo Chol Su
said in a statement carried by state media.
Jo said it “doesn’t make
any sense” for the U.N. council to take issue with only North Korea’s missile
launches, while not doing anything on similar weapons tests by other countries.
He said such a “double standard will invite more serious consequence” but
didn’t elaborate.
Observers say North
Korea could test-fire longer-range missiles in coming weeks.
At Friday’s meeting of
the committee monitoring sanctions and North Korea, where all 15 Security
Council members are represented, U.N. diplomats said a significant majority
expressed concern at Pyongyang’s latest violations of council resolutions
banning ballistic missile launches. They said the Security Council is likely to
hold a closed discussion on the missile launches this week.
Past short-range missile
launches by North Korea typically drew U.N. Security Council condemnations, but
not fresh sanctions on the country. North Korea was slapped with toughened U.N.
sanctions in 2016-17 following its provocative run of missile and nuclear tests
aimed at acquiring the capability of launching nuclear strikes on the U.S.
mainland.