North Korea
tried to export ballistic missile parts to Syria
in May in violation of UN sanctions, Japanese media said Wednesday, citing
diplomats who have seen a classified UN report.
South Korean authorities inspected North Korean cargo bound for Syria
and confiscated hundreds of cylinders that could be used to build the weapons,
the Asahi Shimbun said.
Seoul in June reported the
discovery to the United Nation's North Korea
sanctions committee, which then dispatched experts to South
Korea to inspect the materials, the liberal
daily said.
If confirmed, the reported action shows Pyongyang
violated UN bans on trading military- and weapons-related materials, imposed
successively since 2006 after nuclear tests by the secretive regime.
The 445 graphite cylinders were on a Chinese-registered freighter with a
cargo bound for a Syrian company with North Korean links, Kyodo News said,
citing UN diplomats.
The Asahi said South Korea
confiscated 535 cylinders, disguised as lead pipes that would have no
connection to ballistic missiles.
The finding was included in a report filed this month to members of a
special committee that is charged with overseeing the implementation of
sanctions imposed on North Korea,
Kyodo said.
The apparent attempt at arms exports came shortly after the UN Security
Council adopted a presidential statement calling for tougher sanctions against Pyongyang,
which in April attempted but failed to launch a satellite.
The launch was widely seen by other nations as cover for a missile test.
The graphite cylinders found aboard the cargo ship Xin Yan Tai in South
Korea's Busan port could be used for rocket
nozzles and re-entry vehicle nose tips, Kyodo said.
The ship, registered in Shanghai,
was built in 2005 and is owned by a Shanghai
shipping company, Kyodo said, citing the China Classification Society of
vessels.
The Shanghai firm's involvement
in the case could pose a question over China's
commitment to implementing sanctions on North
Korea, Kyodo added.
The interim report was prepared by a panel of experts from the five
permanent members of the Security Council, Britain,
China, France,
Russia and the United
States, as well as Japan
and South Korea,
Kyodo said.
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