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Air France expanding ‘non-flyover’ area around North Korea following ICBM test

Click to play video: 'North Korea’s state TV shows video of second ICBM launch'
North Korea’s state TV shows video of second ICBM launch
ABOVE: North Korea’s state TV shows video of second ICBM launch – Jul 29, 2017

An Air France flight en route to Paris from Tokyo flew over the area where North Korea’s latest intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) would eventually make contact with the Sea of Japan, 10 minutes before impact, according to a report.

Citing an unnamed U.S. official, ABC News reported that Air France Flight 293 was travelling from Japan to France with 323 people on board around the time North Korea conducted Friday’s ICBM test.

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Click to play video: 'U.S. says ‘time for talk is over’ when it comes to North Korea'
U.S. says ‘time for talk is over’ when it comes to North Korea

Friday’s ICBM test lasted about 45 minutes and the missile reached an altitude of about 3,700 kilometres before splashing down in the Sea of Japan.

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READ MORE: North Korea reportedly showing ‘unprecedented levels’ of submarine activity

Live flight tracking website Flight Aware shows Air France’s travel route, placing the aircraft in the area where the ICBM was believed to have made splashdown in the Sea of Japan.

Screenshot vis Flight Aware

According to CNN, Flight 293 was just over 100 kilometres from the impact site, or about seven minutes of flight time.

In a statement to Global News, an Air France spokesperson confirmed “the missile could have fallen into the sea at more than one hundred kilometers from the airplane’s trajectory.”

”Even if this distance was proven, it would not question the safety of the flight,” Herve Erschler said in the statement. “Moreover, in cooperation with the authorities, Air France constantly analyzes potentially dangerous flyover zones and adapts its flight plans accordingly.”

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READ MORE: China fires back at Donald Trump’s criticism of North Korea and its latest missile test

According to CNN, two fixed air travel routes pass within 16 kilometres of where the missile believed to have made contact with the water.

Air France told Global News that it plans to change its travel routes.

“Air France confirms that North Korea’s missile test zones don’t interfere in any way with Air France’s flight paths. Air France confirms that flight AF293 on 28th July 2017 connecting Tokyo-Haneda to Paris-CDG was operated in accordance with the flight plan and without any reported incident. Moreover, in cooperation with the authorities, Air France constantly analyzes potentially dangerous flyover zones and adapts its flight plans accordingly,” said a statement from Air France.

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Click to play video: 'Light in the sky over Japan may have been North Korea missile'
Light in the sky over Japan may have been North Korea missile

“At this stage, as a precautionary measure, the company has decided to expand the non-flyover area around North Korea, a country that it does not overfly,” Erschler said.

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Citing Korean Central News Agency, the Associated Press reported North Korea leader Kim Jong Un supervised the latest test and expressed “great satisfaction” as a result of the successful launch.

Experts believe Friday’s missile test shows that North Korea theoretically has the ability to reach major U.S. cities.

READ MORE: U.S. flies bombers over Korean Peninsula as show of force after North Korea missile test

The Union of Concerned Scientists reported shortly after Friday’s test, that based on the preliminary numbers of flight time and distance travelled, if the rocket was launched at a “standard trajectory” this missile would have a reach of just over 10,000 kilometres.

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Click to play video: 'Donald Trump promises to ‘handle’ North Korea'
Donald Trump promises to ‘handle’ North Korea

On Monday, U.S. President Donald Trump vowed to deal with North Korea’s weapons program.

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“We will handle North Korea,” Trump told reporters. “We’re going to be able to handle them. It will be handled. We handle everything.”

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