CHRONOLOGY-North Korean Blast
投稿者: prefgovernor 投稿日時: 2004/09/20 21:54 投稿番号: [151832 / 232612]
ロイターが時系列で報道
でも
なんじゃ?
もんじゃ?
煙に巻かれそう・・・
発表の前に話しは出来上がっていた???
CHRONOLOGY-Events Since North Korean Blast First Reported
Fri Sep 17, 2004 06:09 AM ET
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=worldNews&storyID=6264132
SEOUL (Reuters) - A cloud of confusion surrounded a widely reported explosion in North Korea last week with South Korea saying on Friday its latest assessment was that no blast at all occurred at the suspected site.
Following is the sequence of developments and statements since Sunday, when South Korean media reported that a huge explosion had been detected three days earlier in a remote part of North Korea.
Sept. 12 - South Korean Yonhap news agency reports huge blast rocking remote Kimhyungjik county in North Korea's Ryanggang province on Sept. 9. Agency says explosion appeared to be much worse than train blast in April that killed at least 170 people, and that it generated mushroom cloud up to 4 km (2.5 miles) in diameter. South Korean and U.S. officials say it unlikely to have been nuclear explosion as analysts and some media speculated.
Sept. 13 - North Korean Foreign Minister Paek Nam-sun tells visiting British Foreign Office minister Bill Rammell blast was deliberate demolition of mountain for hydro-electric project. North Koreans agree to Rammell's request to allow diplomats to visit site; Pyongyang state media dismiss talk of weapons test as "preposterous smear campaign."
Sept. 14 - South Korean officials say they will use satellite imagery to determine nature of blast. Engineering and power experts in Seoul question North's explanation, saying river in area was unsuitable for hydro-power generation.
Sept. 15 - Secretary of State Colin Powell tells Reuters North Korea's explanation that blast was demolition work for power project squared with what Washington saw.
Sept. 16 - North Korea-based foreign diplomats from Britain, Czech Republic, European Union, India, Mongolia, Poland, Russia and Sweden visit site accompanied by North Korean officials.
Sept. 17 - Diplomats say they saw hydroelectric project under construction, but South Korea says diplomats were taken to site about 100 km (60 miles) from Kimhyungjik county. Confusion deepens when Seoul unification vice minister Rhee Bong-jo tells news conference: "There is no information to support an explosion in the area where there were indications of an explosion."
CHRONOLOGY-Events Since North Korean Blast First Reported
Fri Sep 17, 2004 06:09 AM ET
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=worldNews&storyID=6264132
SEOUL (Reuters) - A cloud of confusion surrounded a widely reported explosion in North Korea last week with South Korea saying on Friday its latest assessment was that no blast at all occurred at the suspected site.
Following is the sequence of developments and statements since Sunday, when South Korean media reported that a huge explosion had been detected three days earlier in a remote part of North Korea.
Sept. 12 - South Korean Yonhap news agency reports huge blast rocking remote Kimhyungjik county in North Korea's Ryanggang province on Sept. 9. Agency says explosion appeared to be much worse than train blast in April that killed at least 170 people, and that it generated mushroom cloud up to 4 km (2.5 miles) in diameter. South Korean and U.S. officials say it unlikely to have been nuclear explosion as analysts and some media speculated.
Sept. 13 - North Korean Foreign Minister Paek Nam-sun tells visiting British Foreign Office minister Bill Rammell blast was deliberate demolition of mountain for hydro-electric project. North Koreans agree to Rammell's request to allow diplomats to visit site; Pyongyang state media dismiss talk of weapons test as "preposterous smear campaign."
Sept. 14 - South Korean officials say they will use satellite imagery to determine nature of blast. Engineering and power experts in Seoul question North's explanation, saying river in area was unsuitable for hydro-power generation.
Sept. 15 - Secretary of State Colin Powell tells Reuters North Korea's explanation that blast was demolition work for power project squared with what Washington saw.
Sept. 16 - North Korea-based foreign diplomats from Britain, Czech Republic, European Union, India, Mongolia, Poland, Russia and Sweden visit site accompanied by North Korean officials.
Sept. 17 - Diplomats say they saw hydroelectric project under construction, but South Korea says diplomats were taken to site about 100 km (60 miles) from Kimhyungjik county. Confusion deepens when Seoul unification vice minister Rhee Bong-jo tells news conference: "There is no information to support an explosion in the area where there were indications of an explosion."
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