North Korea yesterday carried out its most powerful nuclear test to date, claiming to have developed an advanced hydrogen bomb that could sit atop an intercontinental ballistic missile.
"The time has come to exhaust all diplomatic means to end this crisis, and that means quickly enacting the strongest possible measures here in the UN Security Council," US envoy to the UN Nikki Haley said today at an emergency UN Security Council briefing on North Korea.
She said that the North Korean nuclear program is more advanced and more dangerous than ever and the country now claims to have tested a hydrogen bomb.
"To the members of the Security Council, I must say, 'enough is enough'. The time for half measures in the Security Council is over...We must now adopt the strongest possible measures," she asserted.
Haley also sent a warning to nations who continue to do business with North Korea, saying "this crisis goes well beyond the UN".
Under Secretary General Jeffrey Feltman told the Security Council meeting that Secretary-General Antonio Guterres counts on the UN body to remain united and take appropriate action.
"As was said in the Security Council meeting last week, as tensions rise, so does the risk of misunderstanding, miscalculation and escalation. The latest serious developments require a comprehensive response in order to break the cycle of provocations from the DPRK. Such a response must include wise and bold diplomacy to be effective," he said.
Permanent Representative of Italy to the UN, Ambassador Sebastiano Cardi, said the latest nuclear test by North Korea represents a "grave and reckless provocation."
Cardi said Italy calls on the Security Council to adopt further measures in response to the latest nuclear test, "bearing in mind that sanctions must remain a tool for a wider strategy aimed at a peaceful and definitive solution for the Korean peninsula and the region as a whole."
"An effective sanctions regime is essential to make the DPRK leadership calculate the price of its challenge to the International Community and bring them back to the negotiating table for credible multilateral talks," he said.
The Security council meeting was requested by the US, Japan, France, Britain and South Korea.
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