North Korea said Saturday it would invite foreign experts and journalists to observe a satellite launch.
North Korea said Saturday it would invite foreign experts and journalists to observe a satellite launch which the United States and other countries see as a disguised missile test.
The Korean Committee for Space Technology "will invite experienced foreign experts on space science and technology and journalists" to visit the launch site and other places to observe the blast-off next month, the official news agency said.
The North announced Friday it would launch a long-range rocket carrying the satellite between April 12-16, marking the 100th anniversary of the founding president Kim Il-Sung’s birth.
It says the program is part of peaceful space research.
The United States and other countries say any launch would be a serious provocation and would violate UN Security Council resolution 1874, which bans the country from carrying out any ballistic missile launches for any purpose.
The news agency said it had informed the International Civil Aviation Organization, the International Maritime Organization, the International Telecommunication Union and other bodies about the upcoming launch.