The Sunday Guardian

China, u.s. plan permanent denucleari­sation of n. korea

China has been accused of not fully enforcing existing UN sanctions on North Korea.

- REUTERS

China and the United States agreed that efforts to denucleari­se the Korean Peninsula should be “complete, verifiable and irreversib­le”, Chinese state media said on Saturday, reporting the results of high level talks in Washington this week.

“Both sides reaffirm that they will strive for the complete, verifiable and irreversib­le denucleari­sation of the Korean Peninsula,” a consensus document released by the official Xinhua news agency said.

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson had said on Thursday that the United States pressed China to ramp up economic and political pressure on North Korea, during his meeting with top Chinese diplomats and defense chiefs.

China’s top diplomat Yang Jiechi and General Fang Fenghui met Tillerson and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis during the talks. Yang later met with US President Donald Trump in the White House, where they also discussed North Korea, Xinhua reported.

The consensus document also highlighte­d the need to fully and strictly hold to UN Security Council resolution­s and push for dialogue and negotiatio­n, which has long been China’s position on the issue.

Military- to- military ex- changes should also be upgraded and mechanisms of notificati­on establishe­d in order to cut the risks of “judgement errors” between the Chinese and U.S. militaries, the statement also said.

Chinese state media described the talks, the first of their kind with the Trump administra­tion, as an upgrade in dialogue mechanisms between China and the United States, following on from President Xi Jiping’s meeting with Trump in Florida in April.

Xi and Trump are next expected to meet again in Hamburg during the G20 Summit next month. A day last week’s talks, President Donald Trump said China’s efforts to use its leverage with North Korea had failed, raising fresh doubts about his administra- tion’s strategy for countering the threat from North Korea.

The death of American university student Otto Warmbier earlier this week, after his release from 17 months of imprisonme­nt in Pyongyang, further complicate­d Trump’s approach to North Korea.

China, North Korea’s main trading partner, has been accused of not fully enforcing existing UN sanctions on its neighbour, and has resisted some tougher measures.

Washington has considered further “secondary sanctions” against Chinese banks and other firms doing business with North Korea, which China opposes.

 ??  ?? North Korean leader Kim Jong Un visits the newly-built Dental Sanitary Goods Factory in this undated photo.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un visits the newly-built Dental Sanitary Goods Factory in this undated photo.

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