Times Colonist

> Cuba the path to North Korea, Trudeau says,

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CHARLOTTET­OWN — Justin Trudeau says Canada could play a key role in defusing the tense global standoff with the North Korean regime by working with Cuba, a course of action the prime minister says he discussed with Cuban President Raul Castro when the two men met in Havana last year.

“I’ve had surprising conversati­ons with places you wouldn’t expect, including places like Cuba, where they actually have … decent diplomatic relations with the North Korean regime,” Trudeau said Thursday in response to a question about the threat of nuclear war posed after an unrelated speech in Charlottet­own.

“And can we pass along messages through surprising conduits? There hasn’t been huge amount of discussion around that, but it was a topic of conversati­on when I met President Raul Castro last year.”

Trudeau said Canada has taken a keen interest in North Korea’s aggressive stance because the outcome of that country’s developmen­t of missile technology could have a direct impact on Canadians.

“If you look at the flight path, there’s potential challenges for interconti­nental missiles from North Korea passing over Canadian territory,” he said.

“Nothing we have tried as a global community has really managed to prevent what we have now, which is North Korea getting closer to a point where they have nuclear weapons that are actually a threat to the region and to the world. … It’s steadily getting worse.”

The prime minister said the approach taken by the United States has included a combinatio­n of sanctions, diplomatic pressure and “flexing in unpredicta­ble ways — military threats.”

He suggested Canada has taken a different approach.

“These are the kinds of things where Canada can play a role that the United States has chosen not to play this past year.”

This week, North Korea’s official news agency said U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to relist the Asian country as a state sponsor of terrorism amounted to a serious provocatio­n that justifies its developmen­t of nuclear weapons.

The agency said North Korea has no connection to terrorism and “doesn’t care whether or not the United States places the hat of terrorism on our heads.”

Last week, Trudeau told an Asian summit that Canada stands alongside Asia in demanding North Korea abandon its nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs.

He said North Korea’s actions abrogate its internatio­nal obligation­s and violate UN Security Council resolution­s.

On Thursday, Trudeau said the North Korean regime has taken pride in “being on the opposite side of much of the world,” which has made it difficult for the internatio­nal community to deal with its increasing­ly bellicose position. He said working with China and Russia is important because North Korea relies on them for much of its energy supply.

 ??  ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau takes questions from the audience after his speech at the Confederat­ion Centre of the Arts in Charlottet­own, P.E.I.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau takes questions from the audience after his speech at the Confederat­ion Centre of the Arts in Charlottet­own, P.E.I.

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