China
says told North Korea does not want to see tensions rise
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[February 05, 2016]
BEIJING (Reuters) - China has told
North Korea it does not want to see anything happen that could further
raise tensions, China's foreign minister was quoted as saying on Friday,
after Pyongyang announced plans to launch a satellite soon.
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North Korea has said it has a sovereign right to pursue a space
program, although the United States and other governments suspect
such rocket launches are actually missile tests and have called for
Pyongyang to abandon the launch plans.
The North was believed to be making preparations for a test launch
of a long-range rocket, U.S. officials have said, after activity at
its test site was observed by satellite. Pyongyang told U.N.
agencies on Tuesday it planned to launch a satellite between Feb. 8
and 25.
Tension had already risen in East Asia last month after North
Korea's fourth nuclear test, this time of what it said was a
hydrogen bomb.
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said it was natural that Beijing
had sent its special envoy for the nuclear issue, Wu Dawei, to North
Korea in what he described as "a serious situation". He said China
needed contacts "with all parties", mentioning the United States,
South Korea and Russia.
"At the same time, we also need to have necessary contacts with the
North Korea side, to listen to their opinions," Wang told Hong
Kong's Phoenix Television in London after Wu had returned from North
Korea.
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"Of course, an important point is to express China's clear position
to North Korea. We don't want to see anything happen that could
cause further tensions," he said.
"We hope all sides, including North Korea, can meet each other
halfway, and should work hard together to push the North Korean
nuclear issue onto the track of a negotiated resolution."
China is isolated North Korea's most important diplomatic and
economic supporter, but Beijing has been angered by Pyongyang's
nuclear program and signed up to numerous rounds of stringent United
Nations sanctions.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Wang agreed last week on the
need for a significant new U.N. Security Council resolution against
the North, but there were few signs of progress on agreeing on the
details.
(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Paul Tait)
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