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![The missile launches have raised international concern and led to protests [EPA] The missile launches have raised international concern and led to protests [EPA]](http://mwcnews.net/images/stories/Asia/korea/1/2/3/4/5/6/7/protests-concern.jpg) | | The missile launches have raised international concern and led to protests [EPA] | North Korea has test-fired seven more missiles off its eastern coast, days after similar launches sparked international concern, South Korean officials have said.
South Korea's Yonhap news agency quoted a South Korean government official as saying the North had fired the short-range missiles early on Saturday. Regional condemnation North Korea test-fired four short-range anti-ship missiles from the same site on Thursday, triggering protests on Friday in Seoul, where anti-North Korean activists burned mock-up missiles and images of the North Korean leader, Kim Jong-il. In a statement, South Korea's joint chiefs of staff said: "Our military is fully ready to counter any North Korean threats and provocations based on strong South Korea-US combined defence posture." North Korea's state news agency carried no reports on the latest launches. US forces in the region had been ready for the missile tests, Admiral Gary Roughead, the chief of US naval operations, said. "Our ships and forces here are prepared for the tracking of the missiles and observing the activities that are going on," Roughead said after meeting Japanese military officials in Tokyo on Saturday. The Japanese government condemned the North's action. 'Provocative act' The launch "is a serious act of provocation against the security of neighbouring countries, including Japan, and is against the resolution of the UN Security Council", Takeo Kawamura, the Japanese chief cabinet secretary, said in a statement. "It looks like North Korea is trying to attract attention of the international community and also demonstrate its power in the region" Leonid Petrov, North Korea specialist The statement also urged North Korea to suspend all missile development activities.Leonid Petrov, a North Korea specialist from the School of Pacific and Asian studies at the Australian National University, said that the missile launches were an attention-grabbing ploy by the North. "It looks like North Korea is trying to attract attention of the international community and also demonstrate its power in the region," Petrov said. North Korea had previously warned that it would conduct military drills on its eastern coast and had issued a no-sail zone in waters off its east coast through July 10. In April, North Korea launched a rocket that boosted its long-range missile capability followed by a nuclear test – the second since 2006 – on May 25 that put it closer to having a working atomic bomb. Shortly after the atomic test, Pyongyang fired a total of six short-range missiles, renounced the truce in force on the Korean peninsula for half a century and threatened possible attacks on Seoul. The UN last month approved tougher sanctions against North Korea following the May nuclear test, but the North responded by vowing to strengthen its nuclear arsenal.
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Tags: N Korea
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