North Korea is becoming more and more adept at dodging international sanctions, a panel of experts said in a report presented Tuesday to the United Nations.
The commission of eight experts told the U.N. Security Council that it reached this conclusion on the basis of recent inspections and seizures of banned cargo.
The council has adopted resolutions calling for increasingly tough sanctions aimed at thwarting Pyongyang's financial and technical ability to build weapons of mass destruction.
This came after a series of nuclear and long-range ballistic missile tests by North Korea over the past decade.
The new report posted on the U.N. website Tuesday said North Korea has continued to defy those sanctions -- by pushing ahead with its nuclear and ballistic missile programs and engaging in illegal arms trade.
"The Democratic People's Republic of Korea presents a stiff challenge to Member States," the report said.
"It is experienced in actions it takes to evade sanctions. From the incidents analyzed in the period under review, the Panel has found that it makes increasing use of multiple and tiered circumvention techniques," it added.
The panel said the case of the North Korean cargo ship Chong Chon Gang provided key insight into some of those techniques.
The ship was stopped by the Panamanian authorities in July 2013 carrying undeclared weapons that had been hidden under 10,000 tons of sugar from Cuba.
An investigation showed that the North Korean crew had used secret codes in communications.
The crew also falsified the ship's logs and turned off an electronic system that would otherwise have provided real-time information on the ship's location to international maritime authorities, the panel said.
The North Korean embassies in Cuba and Singapore are suspected of helping to arrange the arms shipment, the panel said.
Cuba has said that it was sending obsolete Soviet-era weapons to be repaired in North Korea.
This case helped confirm that one of North Korea's best sources of revenue was weapons exports, and technical support to manufacture and refurbish arms produced in the Soviet Union in the 1960s and 1970s, the panel said.
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