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"We will need these evacuation plans and skills sooner or later in case war breaks out, and I think war can happen any time," said Han Yoo-jin, 16. In Paju, a city near the border with North Korea, dozens of residents ran to underground parking lots and donned gas masks in a drill against chemical, biological and radiological attacks. Rescue workers wearing gas masks and protective suits also brought residents pretending to be infected with chemical agents to ambulances. The drills came amid stepped-up diplomatic moves by the United States and regional powers. New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, on his way to visit North Korea, was scheduled to stop in Beijing on Thursday. Richardson has often acted as a diplomatic troubleshooter and has made regular visits to North Korea. Also Wednesday, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg arrived in Beijing for talks with Chinese State Councilor Dai Bingguo, Beijing's top foreign policy official. Dai returned last week from talks in Pyongyang with North Korean leader Kim Jong Il. China has come under growing pressure from the United States and others to push ally North Korea to change its behavior. South Korea's chief North Korea nuclear envoy traveled to Russia for meetings Wednesday with his Russian counterpart.
[Associated
Press;
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