Kim's visit reveals North Korea's uranium enrichment plant for first time

Pyongyang releases images of Kim Jong-un touring Nuclear Weapons Institute and production base of weapon-grade nuclear materials, making it the first time the isolated nation has unveiled its uranium plant.

Kim tours facilities during a visit to the Nuclear Weapons Institute and the production base of weapon-grade nuclear materials at an undisclosed location in North Korea, in this photo released by official Korean Central News Agency. 
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Kim tours facilities during a visit to the Nuclear Weapons Institute and the production base of weapon-grade nuclear materials at an undisclosed location in North Korea, in this photo released by official Korean Central News Agency. 

North Korea has publicly disclosed a uranium enrichment facility for the first time, as its leader Kim Jong-un called for an expansion of the country's nuclear capabilities, according to South Korea's Yonhap news agency.

Kim inspected the Nuclear Weapons Institute and a production base of weapon-grade nuclear materials, the government news agency KCNA reported on Friday.

As he toured the facility, Kim "encouraged the nuclear scientists faithful to the Party to unconditionally implement the Party's policy of building up nuclear force without an inch of deflection with their strong faith and high practical ability," KCNA said.

Noting that nuclear threats from the United States and its allies "have become more undisguised and crossed the red line," Kim said North Korea must "steadily expand and bolster up its defence capability... and the capability for a preemptive attack with the nuclear force as a pivot."

It comes only a day after North Korea fired multiple short-range ballistic missiles into waters east of the Korean peninsula, Seoul's military said, the nuclear-armed country's first major weapons test since early July.

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Pyongyang has staged dozens of launches this year, part of a testing spree Western experts say could be linked to North Korea's alleged supplying of weapons to ally Russia for use in Ukraine.

Pyongyang has denied any sanctions-busting weapons trade with Russia, but with diplomacy long stalled, it declared South Korea its "principal enemy" this year and recently moved nuclear-capable weapons to border areas.

Seoul's Joint Chief of Staff said it had detected multiple "short-range ballistic missiles" fired early on Thursday from Pyongyang into the East Sea, or Sea of Japan.

The missiles splashed down after flying a round 360 kilometres, the JCS said, adding it had "immediately detected, tracked, and monitored" the launch and was sharing information with allies Tokyo and Washington.

In an apparent reference to that test, KCNA reported on Friday that Kim "oversaw the test-fire for verifying the performance of a new-type 600mm multiple rocket launcher."

The shells "hit the target on an island in the East Sea," according to KCNA.

"The test was conducted, aiming at further developing the launcher's driving system and verifying the combat effectiveness of the launcher in which the whole process of firepower is fully automated," it added.

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Route 6