China Daily (Hong Kong)

Beijing ‘regrets’ renewed Peninsula tension

- By MO JINGXI and WANG QINGYUN mojingxi@chinadaily.com.cn

China said it is regrettabl­e that tensions on the Korean Peninsula have intensifie­d after a period of stability, and called for parties to abide by UN Security Council resolution­s.

Foreign Minister Wang Yi made the remark on Monday as Seoul and Washington kicked off their largesteve­r air force exercise after Pyongyang’s latest launch of an interconti­nental ballistic missile on Nov 29.

“Tensions resurfaced on the peninsula after two months of relative calm, and all related parties didn’t catch the window of opportunit­y that China has appealed for them to take advantage of. China feels regret about it,” Wang said at a joint news conference with his Mongolian counterpar­t in Beijing.

The foreign minister also said that while China takes an open-minded attitude toward solutions to the nuclear issue on the Korean Peninsula, all parties should jointly abide by the regulation­s and spirit of Security Council resolution­s.

“The resolution­s represent the common will of the internatio­nal community, and they are the global duties that should be followed by all members,” Wang said.

Proposals that do not conform to, or measures not in the resolution­s, lack an internatio­nal legal basis and harm the legitimate rights and interests of Security Council members, he added.

The Republic of Korea and the US started the fiveday Vigilant Ace air combat exercise in Seoul on Monday, involving over 230 warplanes and about 12,000 military personnel, Yonhap News Agency reported.

Pyongyang said on Sunday that the drill would push the already acute situation to the brink of nuclear war, according to the Korean Central News Agency.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said on Monday that China hoped all parties will do more to help ease tensions and avoid provoking each other.

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