North
Korea has completed preparations for a mid-range missile launch
tomorrow from its east coast, officials in Seoul have revealed just
hours after foreigners living in South Korea were warned to quit the
country.
The
worrying warning came as speculation heightened that North Korea is
planning to pull its ambassador out of the UK after a shipping container
was pictured outside the London embassy.
Boxes
were seen being loaded onto a large lorry parked outside the pariah
state’s embassy – an ordinary home in Ealing, west London.
Seoul revealed today that foreign nationals in South Korea were told by the North to evacuate in case of a “merciless” war.
“We
do not wish harm on foreigners in South Korea should there be a war,”
said the KCNA news agency, citing its Korea Asia-Pacific Peace
Committee.
The
remarks come as the communist country has repeatedly said it will turn
Seoul and Washington into a “sea of fire” and launch pre-emptive nuclear
attacks against its enemies.
South
Korean forces have been on high alert for an imminent missile launch by
the communist nation, which was seen moving two Musudan missiles to its
east coast last week and mounting them on mobile launchers.
Speculation
had been building that North Korea could carry out a missile test as
early as this week after dictator Kim Jong-un warned he could not
“guarantee the safety of foreigners” after April 10.
Japan
today deployed missile-defense systems at three sites around Tokyo
ahead of the possible missile launch, officials confirmed.
Japan’s defense minister has also reportedly put destroyers with missile interception systems on alert in the Sea of Japan.
“As
North Korea keeps making provocative comments, Japan, co-operating with
relevant countries, will do what we have to do,” Prime Minister Shinzo
Abe said today.
“The government is making utmost efforts to protect our people’s lives and ensure their safety,” he added.
Japan’s
armed forces are authorised to shoot down any North Korean missile
headed towards its territory, a defence ministry spokesman said.
“We
are doing all we can to protect the safety of our nation,” chief
Cabinet spokesman Yoshihide Suga said, though he and Ministry of Defense
officials refused to confirm reports of a naval alert, saying they do
not want to “show their cards” to North Korea.
Tensions
have escalated further after North Korean authorities told embassies in
Pyongyang they could not guarantee their safety from Wednesday – after
saying conflict was inevitable amid joint U.S.-South Korean military
exercises due to last until the end of the month.
However,
no diplomats appear to have left the North Korean capital, despite a
North Korean general reprotedly warning diplomats at the weekend that
the situation remained “grave”.
Earlier
today, North Korean labourers failed to turn up for work at a factory
complex operated with South Korea, effectively shutting down the last
major symbol of cooperation between the hostile neighbours.
Soaring
tensions on the peninsula have been fuelled by North Korean anger over
the imposition of U.N. sanctions after its last nuclear arms test in
February, creating one of the worst crises since the end of the Korean
War in 1953.
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