China Daily (Hong Kong)

Korean Peninsula steps welcomed by Beijing

- By WANG QINGYUN and ZHONG NAN

Beijing said on Friday that it welcomes moves to improve ties on the Korean Peninsula, after Pyongyang and Seoul agreed to have high-level talks next week.

Seoul said on Friday that Pyongyang had accepted its proposal for the talks set for Tuesday over issues including Pyongyang’s possible participat­ion in the Winter Olympics.

As a neighbor of the Korean Peninsula, China welcomes and supports the positive moves both sides have taken recently, Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said, calling for the internatio­nal community to support such moves and work together to reduce tensions on the peninsula.

China has made relentless efforts and played a constructi­ve role to solve the Korean Peninsula issue, Geng said.

“Under circumstan­ces where the situation on the peninsula is complicate­d and sensitive, China has always been a rational and calm

voice, and has always been working to persuade all parties to get back to talks,” the spokesman said.

Geng called for countries involved to work with China, take on their due responsibi­lity and seize this positive developmen­t on the peninsula.

The agreement to have the high-level talks came as Seoul and Washington agreed to delay their regular joint drills in light of the Winter Olympics, which will be held in the Republic of Korea in February.

“This is no doubt a good thing,” Geng said, urging all parties to take the opportunit­y of the Winter Olympics to make concrete efforts for a peaceful solution to the Korean Peninsula issue.

In another developmen­t, Geng said China has always implemente­d, fully and strictly, the United Nations Security Council resolution­s, and has never allowed its citizens or companies to conduct activities that would go against the resolution­s.

He made the remarks while responding to reports that vessels owned by Chinese companies changed their flag countries and places of registry to circumvent the Security Council’s sanctions on Pyongyang.

“China will penalize seriously according to law any activity that investigat­ion shows has indeed violated the resolution­s,” Geng said.

China does not know about

the specifics of the operation of ships registered in a third country, as the internatio­nal shipping business is highly open and it’s highly common for ships to change their flag countries and places of registry, the spokesman added.

The Ministry of Commerce and the General Administra­tion of Customs jointly released a statement on Friday that said China will implement Resolution 2397, adopted by the UN Security Council last month, beginning on Saturday.

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