North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has reviewed images taken by his country's new spy satellite of "major target regions" in South Korea, including its capital and cities hosting US military bases, state media said Saturday.
Pyongyang successfully put a military spy satellite into orbit earlier this week, but South Korea said it was too early to determine if the satellite was functioning as the North claims.
Experts have said putting a working spy satellite into orbit would improve North Korea's intelligence-gathering capabilities, particularly over South Korea, and provide crucial data in any military conflict.
Pyongyang previously claimed, within hours of the Tuesday launch, that Kim was already inspecting photos of US military bases in Guam taken by the satellite, named "Malligyong-1".
On Friday, Kim inspected images taken as the satellite passed over the Korean peninsula, according to the official Korean Central News Agency.
The images were taken from "10:15 to 10:27" on Friday morning, and included those of Seoul, as well as Pyeongtaek, Osan, Mokpo and Gunsan, where South Korean and US military bases are located, KCNA said.
The images also included some areas of North Korea, they added.
Among the South Korean cities mentioned, Pyeongtaek -- around 60 kilometres from Seoul -- hosts Camp Humphreys, the largest overseas US military installation in the world.
Pyeongtaek is also home to the Osan Air Base, which houses Seoul's Air Force Operations Command as well as a US Air Force base.
The North's satellite launch has since prompted the two Koreas to suspend -- the South only partially -- a five-year-old military accord established to de-escalate tensions on the peninsula.
Separately, the top diplomats of South Korea, Japan and the United States on Friday "strongly condemned the launch for its destabilizing effect on the region" after a joint phone call, the US State Department said in a statement.
The launch "used ballistic missile technology in violation of multiple United Nations Security Council resolutions," it said.
Seoul's spy agency has said that Pyongyang, after two failed attempts to put a satellite in orbit earlier this year, received help from Moscow for this week's successful launch.
North Korea's National Aerospace Technology Administration would continue "additional fine-tuning" of the spy satellite's functions on Saturday, KCNA said.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
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