North Korea condemned its US terror listing as a “serious
provocation” on Wednesday, warning that sanctions would never force it
to abandon its nuclear weapons programme.
The response came shortly after China, the North’s sole ally, also
rejected as “wrong” new US sanctions that targeted Chinese companies
doing business with the pariah state.
President Donald Trump Monday declared North Korea a state sponsor of
terrorism, a spot on a US blacklist Pyongyang had shed nearly a decade
ago.
On Tuesday the US unveiled its fresh sanctions which also targeted
North Korean shipping, raising the pressure on the North to abandon its
nuclear programme.
“Our army and people are full of rage and anger towards the heinous
gangsters who dared to put the name of our sacred country in this
wretched list of ‘terrorism’,” North Korean state news agency KCNA
quoted a foreign ministry spokesperson as saying.
Slamming Washington for behaving like an “international judge on
terrorism”, the spokesperson added that the US move was “clearly an
absurdity and a mockery to world peace and security”.
Trump said that the terror designation and new sanctions would be
part of a series of moves over the next two weeks to reinforce his
“maximum pressure campaign” against Kim Jong-Un’s regime.
But the North remained defiant on Wednesday, vowing to continue
building up its nuclear force in the face of repeated US sanctions and
threats.
“The nuclear weapons of the DPRK are the deterrence to safeguard our
sovereignty,” it said, using the initials of the North’s official name.
“As long as the US continues with its anti-DPRK hostile policy, our deterrence will be further strengthened.”
– ‘More should be done’ –
The White House has said it will not tolerate the North’s testing or
deployment of an intercontinental ballistic missile capable of carrying a
nuclear warhead to US cities.
Experts believe Pyongyang is within months of such a threshold,
having carried out six nuclear tests since 2006 and test-fired several
types of missiles, including multi-stage rockets.
China has pressed for dialogue as regional tensions have soared,
saying this week “more should be done” to hold talks to resolve the
crisis.
But on Wednesday Beijing lashed out at the latest sanctions, which
expand the list of Chinese firms accused of doing business with the
North despite promises from Beijing that it will honour UN-backed
punitive measures.
“We consistently oppose any country adopting unilateral sanctions
based on its own domestic laws and regulations and the wrong method of
exercising long-arm jurisdiction,” foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang
told a regular news briefing.
Trump met China’s President Xi Jinping earlier this month and is
bullish about the US-China relationship, but concerns remain that
Beijing is not ready to take tough measures against Kim.
While China has backed the UN measures, it has been reluctant to take
the more drastic step of cutting off oil supplies through a pipeline to
North Korea’s lone refinery, fearing that regime collapse could lead to
chaos on their common border.
And, according to US officials, some Chinese-based banks and trading
firms continue to do business with the North in defiance of UN sanctions
and US threats of unilateral measures.
“China has been comprehensively respecting and strictly implementing
(UN) Security Council resolutions and our efforts on this regard are
witnessed by all,” Lu said.
The spokesman called on Washington to provide “any solid evidence” that Chinese companies have violated the UN sanctions.
He said that if any companies or individuals have violated domestic
laws, “we will severely deal with that in accordance with our laws and
regulations”.
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Wednesday, 22 November 2017
North Korea calls US terror listing a ‘serious provocation’
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