North Korea fires suspected ballistic missile

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Kim Jong Un had vowed to bolster the North's defences during a key meeting of the ruling party in December last year

North Korea has fired a "suspected ballistic missile", less than a week after it launched what it claimed to be a hypersonic missile.

Seoul's Joint Chief of Staff (JCS) said it detected the launch at 07:27 local time on Tuesday (22: 27 GMT Monday).

Japan's coast guard also reported the launch, saying North Korea fired a "ballistic missile-like object".

It comes as six countries had earlier issued a statement urging the North to cease its "destabilising actions".

"Our military detected a suspected ballistic missile fired by North Korea from land towards the East Sea ," said the JCS, adding that intelligence authorities from South Korea and the US were in the process of "conducting a detailed analysis".

The latest launch underscores North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's pledge to bolster the country's defences as part of is policy priorities for 2022, outlined during a key meeting in December last year.

On Monday, the United States mission to the United Nations, joined by France, Ireland, Japan, the United Kingdom, and Albania, had issued a joint statement condemning last week's test.

"These actions increase the risk of miscalculation and escalation and pose a significant threat to regional stability," said US ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield, reading the joint statement ahead of a closed-door Security Council meeting on the missile launch.

The group called for North Korea "to refrain from further destabilising actions... and engage in meaningful dialogue towards our shared goal of complete denuclearisation."

What's the situation in North Korea?

The tests come as Pyongyang struggles with food shortages due to a coronavirus blockade that has severely affected its economy.

At the end-of-year meeting, Mr Kim said the country was facing a "great life-and-death struggle", adding that increasing development and improving people's living standards were among this year's goals.

United Nations officials had earlier warned that vulnerable children and elderly people in North Korea were at risk of starvation.

The US has been calling for North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons, and Pyongyang's relationship with President Joe Biden's administration has so far been fraught with tension.

North Korea has also repeatedly accused South Korea of double standards over military activities.

South Korea recently tested its first submarine-launched ballistic missile, which it said was needed as deterrence against North Korea's "provocations".

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Why does North Korea keep launching missiles?

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