NKorea Discloses Uranium Enrichment Facility, Kim Calls for More Nuclear Weapons

HANDOUT - 13 September 2024, North Korea, ---: A photo released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on 13 September 2024, shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-un (L) inspecting a uranium enrichment facility. Photo: -/KCNA/KNS/dpa
HANDOUT - 13 September 2024, North Korea, ---: A photo released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on 13 September 2024, shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-un (L) inspecting a uranium enrichment facility. Photo: -/KCNA/KNS/dpa
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NKorea Discloses Uranium Enrichment Facility, Kim Calls for More Nuclear Weapons

HANDOUT - 13 September 2024, North Korea, ---: A photo released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on 13 September 2024, shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-un (L) inspecting a uranium enrichment facility. Photo: -/KCNA/KNS/dpa
HANDOUT - 13 September 2024, North Korea, ---: A photo released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on 13 September 2024, shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-un (L) inspecting a uranium enrichment facility. Photo: -/KCNA/KNS/dpa

North Korea offered a rare glimpse into a secretive facility to produce weapons-grade uranium as state media reported Friday that leader Kim Jong Un visited the area and called for stronger efforts to “exponentially” increase the number of his nuclear weapons.
It’s unclear if the site is at the North's main Yongbyon nuclear complex, but it's the North's first disclosure of a uranium-enrichment facility since it showed one at Yongbyon to visiting American scholars in 2010, The Associated Press reported. While the latest unveiling is likely an attempt to apply more pressure on the US and its allies, the images North Korea's media released of the area could provide outsiders with a valuable source of information for estimating the amount of nuclear ingredients that North Korea has produced.
During a visit to the Nuclear Weapons Institute and the production base of weapon-grade nuclear materials, Kim expressed “great satisfaction repeatedly over the wonderful technical force of the nuclear power field” held by North Korea, the official Korean Central News Agency reported.
KCNA said that Kim went around the control room of the uranium enrichment base and a construction site that would expand its capacity for producing nuclear weapons. North Korean state media photos showed Kim being briefed by scientists while walking along long lines of tall gray tubes, but KCNA didn’t say when Kim visited the facilities and where they are located.
KCNA said Kim stressed the need to further augment the number of centrifuges to “exponentially increase the nuclear weapons for self-defense,” a goal he has repeatedly stated in recent years. It said Kim ordered officials to push forward the introduction of a new-type centrifuge, which has reached its completion stage.
Kim said North Korea needs greater defense and preemptive attack capabilities because “anti-(North Korea) nuclear threats perpetrated by the US imperialists-led vassal forces have become more undisguised and crossed the red-line,” KCNA said.
South Korea’s Unification Ministry said it strongly condemned North Korea’s unveiling of a uranium-enrichment facility and Kim’s vows to boost his country's nuclear capability. A ministry statement said North Korea’s “illegal” pursuit of nuclear weapons in defiance of UN bans is a serious threat to international peace. It said North Korea must realize it cannot win anything with its nuclear program.
North Korea first showed a uranium enrichment site in Yongbyon to the outside world in November 2010, when it allowed a visiting delegation of Stanford University scholars led by nuclear physicist, Siegfried Hecker, to tour its centrifuges. North Korean officials then reportedly told Hecker that 2,000 centrifuges were already installed and running at Yongbyon.
Satellite images in recent years have indicated North Korea was expanding a uranium enrichment plant at its Yongbyon nuclear complex. Nuclear weapons can be built using either highly enriched uranium or plutonium, and North Korea has facilities to produce both at Yongbyon. It’s not clear exactly how much weapons-grade plutonium or highly enriched uranium has been produced at Yongbyon and where North Korea stores it.



Body of Turkish-American Activist Killed in West Bank Arrives in Türkiye 

This handout photograph taken and released by Turkish news agency DHA (Demiroren News Agency) on September 13, 2024 shows the coffin of Turkish-American International Solidarity Movement activist Aysenur Ezgi Eygi during her funeral procession at Istanbul airport. Handout / DHA (Demiroren News Agency) / AFP
This handout photograph taken and released by Turkish news agency DHA (Demiroren News Agency) on September 13, 2024 shows the coffin of Turkish-American International Solidarity Movement activist Aysenur Ezgi Eygi during her funeral procession at Istanbul airport. Handout / DHA (Demiroren News Agency) / AFP
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Body of Turkish-American Activist Killed in West Bank Arrives in Türkiye 

This handout photograph taken and released by Turkish news agency DHA (Demiroren News Agency) on September 13, 2024 shows the coffin of Turkish-American International Solidarity Movement activist Aysenur Ezgi Eygi during her funeral procession at Istanbul airport. Handout / DHA (Demiroren News Agency) / AFP
This handout photograph taken and released by Turkish news agency DHA (Demiroren News Agency) on September 13, 2024 shows the coffin of Turkish-American International Solidarity Movement activist Aysenur Ezgi Eygi during her funeral procession at Istanbul airport. Handout / DHA (Demiroren News Agency) / AFP

The body of a Turkish-American activist was received with a solemn ceremony at the airport in Istanbul on Friday, arriving a week after she was shot in the head by Israeli troops in the occupied West Bank.

The Istanbul governor and other officials lined up in front of Aysenur Ezgi Eygi's coffin, wrapped in the red-and-white Turkish flag, with police in formal uniforms standing guard at each end.

An imam led prayers at the ceremony at Istanbul Airport after her body was flown overnight via Baku from Tel Aviv. Eygi, 26, was killed as she took part in a protest against settlement expansion in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

After the ceremony, Eygi's body was sent to Izmir by plane, the governor's office told Reuters. The funeral was set to be held on Saturday in the Turkish Aegean coastal city of Didim, where her family lives.

Israel has acknowledged that its troops shot Eygi, a Turkish-American educated in Washington State, but says they did so unintentionally during a demonstration turning violent.

Washington has said the killing was unacceptable. Ankara says it will request international arrest warrants for those to blame for what it calls an intentional killing.

Justice Minister Yilmaz Tunc said the Ankara chief prosecutor's office is investigating "those responsible for the martyrdom and murder of our sister Aysenur Ezgi Eygi".