South Korean President Park Geun-hye vowed on Tuesday further "solid" measures against North Korea, in the wake of suspending operations at a mutually run mechanical http://www.smettere-di-fumare.it/forum/profile.php?mode=viewprofile&u=1025259park as discipline for the North's late long-go rocket dispatch and atomic test.
North Korea's late activities, and dangers to lead more "great demonstrations of incitement", show that it has no enthusiasm for peace, Park said in a discourse to parliament.
"The suspension of the Kaesong modern zone is just the begin of a progression of moves we will be making together with the global group," she said.
"The legislature will take solid and powerful measures for the North to go deep down desensitizing acknowledgment that atomic advancement won't help its survival but instead it will just accelerate the breakdown of the administration," she said.
South Korea suspended the operation of the Kaesong mechanical zone a week ago, which had been run mutually with the North for over 10 years and was a key wellspring of hard coin for the devastated North, as discipline for Pyongyang's rocket dispatch on Feb. 7.
Seoul and the United States said the dispatch was indeed a test of a long-extend rocket that damaged U.N. Security Council resolutions. The North said the dispatch was a piece http://www.gtactix.com/forum/index.php?action=profile;u=9756;sa=summaryof its logical project intended to dispatch satellites into space.
Washington and Seoul are looking for backing from Beijing, Pyongyang's principle associate, for harder assents against North Korea for the rocket dispatch and January's atomic test.
South Korea is on uplifted caution for any sort of "amazing moves" Pyongyang may take, Park said, requesting bipartisan backing. She likewise cautioned against utilizing the expanded strain for political purposes, "which would be precisely what the North would need to see".
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