North Korea has moved into place a long-range rocket for a controversial
launch later this month - amid reports it is also planning a nuclear
test.
Pyongyang says the Unha-3 rocket, which it plans to launch between 12 and 16 April, will put a satellite into orbit.
But opponents of the move fear it is a disguised long-range missile test.
Meanwhile, South Korean officials say new satellite images suggest the North is preparing to carry out a third nuclear test.
The images show piles of earth and sand at the entrance of a
tunnel at the Punggye-ri site, where tests of a nuclear bomb were
previously carried out in 2006 and 2009, South Korea's Yonhap news
agency reports.
"Recent satellite images led us to conclude the North has
been secretly digging a new underground tunnel in the nuclear test
site... besides two others where the previous tests were conducted," one
unnamed official told the AFP news agency.
North Korea has been under close scrutiny by its neighbours
and the international community since Kim Jong-un became leader of the
secretive state following the death of his father, Kim Jong-il, in
December 2011.
Pyongyang had agreed in February to a partial
freeze in nuclear activities and a missile test moratorium in return for
US food aid. But the deal was put on hold last month after the North
announced its rocket launch plans.
'Peaceful purposes'
The BBC's Damian Grammaticas was among a group of foreign
journalists taken by train to the Sohae satellite station at
Tongchang-ri, on the country's north-west coast, on Sunday to see the
final preparations for the rocket launch.
All three stages of the rocket were visibly in position at the launch pad.
Station manager Jang Myong-jim told reporters that
preparations were on track and fuelling would begin soon, without giving
exact timings.
He said the 100kg (220 pound) satellite is designed to send
back images and information that will be used for weather forecasts as
well as surveys of North Korea's natural resources.
But should the country be putting its effort into a satellite
launch when it cannot feed its own people, our correspondent asked.
''If we don't develop our own technology, we will become
slaves,'' the director of the launch site told the BBC. ''We need our
own technology to be an advanced country, to be a powerful space
nation.''
Pyongyang has previously said the launch, for "peaceful
purposes", is to mark the centennial of the birth of founding leader Kim
Il-sung.
But the United States and North Korea's neighbours say it
contravenes UN resolutions that were imposed after a similar launch in
April 2009.
Japan and South Korea have warned they will shoot the rocket down if it strays into their territory.
The North says any of those responses would be considered
hostile acts. But it seems determined to go ahead even if it sets of a
dangerous cascade of events, says our correspondent.
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