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North Korean remittances at risk, warns US

A fifth North Korean nuclear test could trigger new sanctions including an effort to choke off hard currency earnings by its workers abroad, the top US diplomat for the Asia-Pacific region has said.

A fifth North Korean nuclear test could trigger new sanctions including an effort to choke off hard currency earnings by its workers abroad, the top US diplomat for the Asia-Pacific region has said.

“Like a regimen of medicine, the dosage can be upped when the effects fall short of what’s required,” assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs Danny Russel said on Tuesday.

Mr Russel made clear he was speaking about the possibility of fresh sanctions by the UN Security Council, by the United States on its own, or by a group of like-minded states from the European Union and Southeast Asia, along with the United States.

North Korea conducted a fourth nuclear test in January and a long-range rocket launch the following month, triggering expanded UN sanctions aimed at starving it of funds for its atomic weapons programme. Some experts expect North Korea to conduct a fifth nuclear test in the near future, possibly before a ruling party congress in early May, following an embarrassing failure of a test of an intermediate-range missile last week.

Estimates of North Korean workers abroad vary widely but a study by the South’s state-run Korea Institute for National Unification put the number as high as 1,50,000, primarily in China and Russia, sending back as much as $900 million annually. North Koreans are known to work abroad in restaurants and on construction sites, and also as doctors.

The effectiveness of current, or any new, sanctions depends heavily on them being fully implemented by China, North Korea’s neighbour, the closest thing it has to an ally and by far its largest trading partner, US officials and analysts say.

China said all sides should refrain from doing or saying anything to worsen tensions.

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