Top diplomats from U.S., Japan, South
Korea to meet on North Korea
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[September 14, 2016]
By Tony Munroe and Ben Blanchard
SEOUL/BEIJING (Reuters) - U.S. Secretary of
State John Kerry will meet with his Japanese and South Korean
counterparts in New York on Sunday to discuss responses to North Korea's
latest nuclear test, South Korea's foreign ministry said on Wednesday.
The three countries are pushing for tough new U.N. Security Council
sanctions on North Korea after the isolated country on Friday conducted
its fifth and largest nuclear test.
The blast was in defiance of U.N. sanctions that were tightened in
March.
China, the North's chief ally, backed the March resolution but is more
resistant to harsh new sanctions this time after the United States and
South Korea decided to deploy a sophisticated anti-missile system in the
South, which China adamantly opposes.
South Korea said Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se and his counterparts
Kerry and Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida will meet during the
annual U.N. General Assembly to discuss putting further pressure on
North Korea.
The United States wants China to do more, with U.S. Defence Secretary
Ash Carter last week singling out the role he said China should play in
curbing its neighbor.
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TESTING TIMES
North Korea has been testing nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles at
an unprecedented rate this year under young leader Kim Jong Un.
On Tuesday, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi spoke with South Korea's
Yun by phone, expressing Beijing's opposition to the North's latest
nuclear test but also reiterating opposition to the planned deployment
of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THADD) anti-missile system
in the South, China's foreign ministry said.
China is North Korea's most important diplomatic and trade partner and
refuses to cut the country off completely, fearing it could collapse.
Beijing's official People's Daily newspaper on Wednesday called the
United States a troublemaker and said it has no right to lecture China
about taking responsibility for reining in North Korea as tensions on
the peninsula are a direct result of U.S. actions.
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Secretary of State John Kerry (C) shakes hands with Japan's Foreign
Minister Fumio Kishida (L) and South Korea’s Foreign Minister Yun
Byung-se before a meeting at the Lotte New York Palace hotel in
Manhattan, New York September 29, 2015. REUTERS/Darren Ornitz
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In a commentary, the ruling Communist Party's official paper said
the United States was pretending it had nothing to do with the North
Korea issue and was putting the blame on others.
"People have reason to doubt whether Washington is willing to make
the effort to push the North Korea issue in the direction of a
resolution," the paper said.
China and Russia have pushed for a resumption of six party talks on
denuclearization in North Korea. The talks, which also involve
Japan, South Korea and the United States, have been on hold since
2008.
Washington has said it is willing to negotiate with the North if it
the country commits to denuclearization, which Pyongyang has refused
to do.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will seek Cuba's help in
responding to North Korea's nuclear and missile programs during a
rare visit to Havana next week, a spokesman said.
(Editing by Lincoln Feast)
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