World leaders worried after Pyongyang's "blatant defiance"
World leaders worried after Pyongyang's "blatant defiance"
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How it happened: An official maps the seismic waves after North Korea's nuclear test, whichu00a0 was measured in South Korea (bottom) in Seoul yesterday. pic/ap |
New sanctions
French officials said they would push for new sanctions, and even traditional Pyongyang ally China said it was "resolutely opposed" to the test, which Russian officials estimated yielded a powerful 10 to 20-kiloton blast enough to flatten a city and far more than North Korea managed in a 2006 atomic test.
Pyongyang's unprecedented defiance raises the stakes in the mounting standoff over its nuclear programme.
Last month, Pyongyang launched a rocket despite international calls for restraint, abandoned international nuclear negotiations, restarted its nuclear plants and warned it would carry out atomic and long-range missile tests.
Pyongyang is believed to have enough weaponised plutonium for at least a half-dozen atomic bombs. However, experts say scientists have not yet mastered the miniaturisation needed to mount a nuclear device onto a long-range missile.
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