YANJI, China (Reuters) - An ethnic Korean woman in a cafe near China's border with North Korea said she was terrified on hearing of the North's announcement this week that it had successfully tested a hydrogen bomb.
The United States is pressing China to end "business as usual" with its North Korean ally, but in Yanji, 30 km (19 miles) from the border and home to many ethnic Koreans, the mood was one of resigned scepticism.
