Hundreds dead as North Korean nuclear base collapses
At least 200 believed to be dead following collapse of underground nuclear compound in North Korea. Massive radiation leak feared.
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An underground North Korean military facility used for nuclear
tests collapsed earlier this month, Pyongyang revealed Tuesday. The collapse
occurred on October 10th at the Punggye-ri underground nuclear facility, 50
miles from the Chinese border, South Korea’s Yonhap media outlet reported. According to
a North Korean official, the collapse occurred during the construction of an
underground tunnel. The Punggye-ri facility is located underneath the southern
slope of Mount Mantap. Recent thermonuclear weapons tests at the site are
believed to be responsible for the collapse. Roughly 100 people were trapped in
the initial collapse, Asahi
TV reported, with 100 more lost during failed rescue attempts.
On Monday, South Korean weather agency chief Nam Jae-Cheol told lawmakers that
the Punggye-ri facility could collapse if used for further testing, the Associated Press reported.
Last month, just
after North Korea confirmed
it had tested a hydrogen bomb, Chinese scientists warned
that he Punggye-ri facility was at risk. Researchers claimed that an explosion
at the facility could spread dangerous radiation across the entire hemisphere. “China
cannot sit and wait until the site implodes. Our nstruments can detect nuclear
fallout when it arrives, but it will be too late by then. There will be public
panic and anger at the government for not taking action," a researcher at
the country's Peking University told the South China Morning Post. "The fallout can
spread to an entire hemisphere," Institute of Atmospheric Physics
Associate Researcher Lan Xiaoqing said.
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