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China
reluctant to back Korea sanctions
BEIJING—China appeared to shy away Thursday from backing U.S. efforts to
impose a travel ban and financial sanctions on North Korea for its
claimed nuclear test, saying any U.N. action should focus on bringing
its communist neighbor back to talks.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said North Korea should
understand it had made a mistake but "punishment should not be the
purpose" of any U.N. response.
U.N. action "should be conducive to the de-nuclearization of the Korean
peninsula ... and the resumption of the talks," he told reporters. "It's
necessary to express clearly to North Korea that ... the international
community is opposed to this nuclear test."
The United States has circulated a new U.N. Security Council resolution
that seeks to ban travel by people involved in North Korea's weapons
program but softens some other measures to win Russian and Chinese
support. North Korea warned it would consider increased U.S. pressure an
act of war and take unspecified countermeasures.
China's response to the crisis has been closely watched because it is
considered to have the most leverage with the unpredictable, reclusive
North Korean regime. China, a veto-wielding Security Council member, is
the North's top provider of desperately needed energy and economic aid.
Chinese officials have refused to say publicly what consequences they
believe North Korea should face for its claimed nuclear test, although
its U.N. ambassador, Wang Guangya, agreed earlier this week that the
Security Council must impose "punitive actions."
Japan is imposing its own new sanctions against North Korea. The ruling
Liberal Democratic Party approved several harsh measures Thursday,
including limits on imports and a ban on all North Korean ships in
Japanese waters.
The latest U.S. proposal, obtained by The Associated Press Wednesday
night, dropped Japanese demands to prohibit North Koreans ships from
entering any port, and North Korean aircraft from taking off or landing
in any country. These sanctions would likely face strong Russian and
Chinese opposition.
The resolution would still require countries to freeze all assets
related to North Korea's weapons and missile programs. But a call to
freeze assets from other illicit activities such as "counterfeiting,
money-laundering or narcotics" was dropped. So was a call to prevent
"any abuses of the international financial system" that could contribute
to the transfer or development of banned weapons.
The North will consider increased U.S. pressure "a declaration of war,"
RI Kong Son, vice spokesman for North Korea's Foreign Ministry, said in
an interview with AP Television News in Pyongyang. He said North Korea
would take unspecified "physical countermeasures."
Song Il Ho, a North Korean envoy to Japan, gave a similar warning to
Tokyo. "We will take strong countermeasures," he told Kyoto News Agency.
Since Pyongyang announced it exploded its first atomic bomb Monday,
there have been daily South Korean and Japanese news reports that the
North is preparing another test.
On Thursday, the South Korean newspaper Munhwa Ilbo quoted an
unidentified source familiar with North Korean affairs as saying a
second test would occur in two or three days.
South Korea's National Intelligence Service could not immediately be
reached for comment.
South Korean scientists have been scrambling for signs of radioactivity
that would confirm Monday's underground test. Han Seung-jae, an official
at the Korea Institute of Nuclear Safety, said experts were still unsure
the North had tested a nuclear device.
"So far, we have not detected any abnormal level of radioactivity" in
South Korea, he said.
Japanese military planes have also been monitoring for radioactivity in
the atmosphere but have reported no abnormal readings.
North Korea has been demanding direct talks with the United States, but
President Bush refused to agree to such a meeting in a news conference
Wednesday. He argued that Pyongyang would be more likely to listen to
the protests of many nations.
Bush added that the U.S. was ready to defend its allies in the region,
but that it would also try to use diplomacy to deal with North Korea.
"I believe the commander in chief must try all diplomatic measures
before we commit our military," he said. —Agencies |