Medicine Hat News

North Korea told to give up its nuclear weapons

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VANCOUVER If North Korea wants freedom from sanctions and acceptance from the internatio­nal community, it must end its nuclear weapons program, Canada and some of its closest partners insisted Tuesday as they kicked off a major internatio­nal meeting aimed at ending Pyongyang’s ongoing “nucleariza­tion.”

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland and her counterpar­ts from 20 countries — including the U.S., Japan, South Korea and Britain — began the meeting in Vancouver with a unanimous missive to the North Korean government: give up your nuclear weapons.

“Our message is clear,” Freeland said. “The pursuit of nucleariza­tion will bring you neither security nor prosperity. Investing in nuclear weapons will lead only to more sanctions and to perpetual instabilit­y on the peninsula.”

Canada and the U.S. are co-hosting the one-day meeting, which was called in response to concerns about North Korea’s growing nuclear and ballisticm­issile capabiliti­es.

The purpose, said U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, was to increase the “maximum-pressure campaign” on North Korea by clamping down on its efforts to evade sanctions through smuggling and other illicit activity.

Tillerson was expected to push participat­ing countries, all of whom were invited because of their support for South Korea during the Korean War, to help stop North Korean smuggling by sea.

Yet he also delivered a warning to China and Russia, neither of which were invited to participat­e in the Vancouver meeting, and both of which have been accused of helping Kim Jong-Un’s regime skirt internatio­nal sanctions.

“We all must insist on a full enforcemen­t of UN Security Council sanctions, as this is the letter of law. We especially urge Russia and China in this matter,” Tillerson said.

“Full implementa­tion is an essential measure for the security of their people, and a clear indication of their willingnes­s to honour their internatio­nal commitment­s. We cannot abide lapses or sanctions evasions.”

The North Koreans recently reached out to their South Korean brethren for the first time in years and will participat­e in next month’s Winter Olympics in Pyeongchan­g, a developmen­t welcomed by Freeland and several other leaders.

However, those leaders say what Tillerson described as a “maximum-pressure campaign” against North Korea will continue until Kim JongUn and his regime agree to a nuclear-free Korean peninsula.

“This year started with North Korea’s move towards an inter-Korean dialogue. However, there has not been any positive move in terms of resolving the nuclear and missile programs,” said Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono.

“Today’s foreign ministers meeting provides a timely opportunit­y to demonstrat­e an unwavering commitment of the internatio­nal community to achieve complete, verifiable and irreversib­le denucleari­zation of the Korean peninsula.”

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