North Korea on Friday denied that there had been deaths in an accident at its nuclear test ground following its latest atomic test as previously reported by a Japanese broadcaster.
A TV Asahi report citing North Korean sources said some 200 people may have died when a tunnel collapsed days after North Korea's nuclear test on September 3, reports Efe news.
In a statement published by state-run Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), North Korea condemned what it described as a "false report", and attacked the Japanese authorities for allowing TV Asahi to broadcast such information.
Pyongyang accused the "Japanese reactionaries" of wanting to create a smokescreen with the report and of spreading the "fictitious story" that there was a "threat from the north", which the regime considered an excuse to facilitate a future invasion of its territory.
The regime also accused Tokyo of putting "interceptor missiles on a permanent deployment" and of mobilising ordinary citizens for an evacuation drill under the "pretext of the ballistic rocket launch by North Korea".
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Although it is impossible to verify the information reported by TV Asahi given the extreme secrecy of the North Korean regime, several experts said that Pyongyang's repeated nuclear tests - six to date - could have caused significant structural damage to the tunnel in the Punggye-ri nuclear test ground.
South Korean Meteorological Administration director Nam Jae-cheol recently explained that a satellite image analysis showed the real possibility of a major collapse in Punggye-ri, located under a small mountain range in the northeast of North Korea, if another detonation occurs in the tunnels.
--IANS
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