Saturday, December 20, 2014

According to UN Report: North Korea nuclear forces will massively expand – THE WORLD

After the allegation of massive human rights violations, North Korea has announced a massive expansion of its nuclear forces. “Now is the hostile US policy clearly to invade our republic under the guise of human rights, the idea of ​​a nuclear-free Korean Peninsula is no longer sustainable,” said a spokesman for the Foreign Ministry after a report by the state news agency KCNA on Saturday. Efforts to strengthen the nuclear forces would be doubled in every way.

UN member states had the Security Council called on North Korea for human rights crimes before the International Criminal Court (ICC ) to indict. It is based on a UN report, is systematically tortured by the isolated in the country, political killings are common, famines and a system of prison camps similar to the Nazi concentration camps is maintained. A legal action by the Security Council is unlikely, however, since there is an expected veto of China.

The Foreign Ministry spokesman did not address allegations of US police authority FBI, behind the hacker attack on the media company Sony put North Korea. US President Barack Obama has announced that it will respond to the attack. Background is the now deposed launch of the film “The Interview”, a satire about an attack on North Korea’s ruler Kim Jung Un.

had hackers because of the strip Interna threatened from company computers and published with attacks on theaters that showed the film. North Korea has regarded the publication as an act of war, but any connection with the hacker group Guardians of Peace (GoP dt. “Keeper of Peace”) rejected.

Sony defended himself against criticism of Obama to be buckled from the threat. “The president, the press and the public wrong, however, the actual flow terms,” ​​said the head of the US film subsidiary Sony Pictures, Michael Lynton, the CNN. Sony does not control cinema and could not decide which films would shown. “Therefore, I disagree with the view that it was a mistake.” (Reporting by Jack Kim, written by Hans-Edzard Busemann; edited by Sören Amelang

The US Federal Bureau of Investigation announced on Friday, her subject sufficient. information which allow for the conclusion that North Korea was behind the hacker attack. Secretary of State John Kerry condemned the attack and threats as a “violation of international standards”. is the procedure “a blatant attempt of an isolated regime to suppress freedom of expression”.

On Saturday was also announced that the head of the Sony Group, Kazuo Hirai in Japan to media said early concerned about North Korea satire “The Interview “Lange had shown. before the cyber attack against the film studio Sony Pictures in November Hirai took offense at scenes in the film in the summer, reports the” Los Angeles Times “on Saturday. The newspaper attacked emails between the Sony Corp. were published in Tokyo and the movie studio in California, the hackers for their attack on the company in the network.

produced from the mail traffic is that Hirai from June to repeatedly called for the mitigation of the final scene and eventually procured. The film show finally the murder of North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un by two US journalists who wrote the paper. Sony has planned for Christmas Premiere of “The Interview” now canceled after numerous cinemas had taken the film because of the terror threats from the program.

reader comments are hidden.

// The following are highly recommended additional parameters. var disqus_identifier = 135605110; // article id where comments used var disqus_url=’http://www.welt.de/politik/ausland/article135605110/Nordkorea-will-Atomstreitkraefte-massiv-ausbauen.html’;//article url where comments disqusAd used function (e) {var s2 = document.createElement (“iframe”); s2.src = “http://appc.welt.de/static/welt/2012/pa-anzeigen/anzeige.html”; s2.width = 620; s2.height = 100; s2.style.overflow = ‘hidden’; s2.scrolling = “no”; s2.style.border = “none”; $ (E) .parent () append (s2). s2.scrolling = “no”; } Var dsqcounter = 1; / * * * DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE * * * / $ (document) .ready (function () {(function () {var disqusSsoEnabled = false;! Var experimental mode = $ .cookie (‘BIGP_EXPERIMENTAL’); if (experimental mode) {disqusSsoEnabled = true;} if (disqusSsoEnabled) {window.disqusid = $ .cookie (‘disqusid’); window.disqus_config = function () {this.sso = {name: “Login” button: “http : //img.welt.de/skins/welt/gfx/disqus_login.png “, url:” https://ssl.welt.de/user-web/disqus/login.jsp “logout” https: / /ssl.welt.de/user-web/disqus/logout.jsp “, width:” 500 “, height:” 500 “}; if (window.disqusid) {window.disqusid = window.disqusid.replace (new RegExp (“.”, “g”), ‘=’); window.disqusid = window.disqusid.replace (new RegExp (“_”, “g”), ”); this.page.remote_auth_s3 = window.disqusid; this.page.api_key = ’8JmKKMV2FgF5OgVCye4P0v3Q9aJK8eQOZ6VtqjfLaMgTzrNy465erNMGjGFhbW2X’; }}; }} ()); (Function () {var dsq = document.createElement (‘script’); dsq.type = ‘text / javascript’; dsq.async = true; dsq.src = ‘http: //’ + disqus_shortname + ‘.disqus. com / embed.js ’; if ($ .cookie (‘ASsocialOptout’)! = ‘true’) {(document.getElementsByTagName (‘head’) [0] || document.getElementsByTagName (‘body’) [0]) .appendChild (dsq);} else {$ (‘.disqus .optoutSocMed’) html (optoutHTML) .show ();.}}) (); wDisqusCfg var = {disqussion: false}; asms.extend (asms.config, “wDisqus” wDisqusCfg); asms.general.ece.widgets.disqus.init (asms.config.wDisqus); }); blog comments powered by

LikeTweet

No comments:

Post a Comment