DPR Korea should heed international calls on missile tests – Annan
United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan today repeated his call for caution on the part of the authorities of the
Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), pointing out that the broader regional context requires restraint.
“As I have said recently, to be testing that kind of missile in a region like the Korean Peninsula, at a time when we
have lots of difficult issues, and the six-party talks have stalled, it is not a wise thing to do to, and North Korea
must listen to what the international community is telling it,” Mr. Annan said in response to a question about
Pyongyang’s missile tests.
On the issue of action by the Security Council, Mr. Annan said: “I will leave the Council to make its own judgment.”
Another reporter, in an apparent reference to an upcoming UN conference to review global action on small arms and light
weapons, asked whether “the UN was trying to take away guns from Americans.” Mr. Annan strongly refuted this myth: “That
thing couldn’t be further from the truth.”
“When we talk about small arms and the damage they are doing around the world, we all need to look around us,” the
Secretary-General said. “We are often concerned about weapons of mass destruction, and yet most of the killing taking
place today, whether in Darfur or Congo or elsewhere is done by small arms.”
He added that the UN, as an international organization of sovereign States concerned for the welfare of the people and
working to protect them, has a legitimate role to play. The UN “would want to do something about small arms, would want
to bring some order into this area,” he said.
“We are not out to take guns away from Americans. The intention is to ensure that guns do not get into the wrong hands
and are used for the civil wars that we see around the world.”