The Borneo Post

Trump to decide on N. Korea terror list after Asia trip

-

BEIJING: US President Donald Trump will decide whether to redesignat­e orth Korea as a ‘state sponsor of terrorism’ at the end of his tour of Asia next week, the White House said.

The designatio­n was lifted by then-president George W. Bush in 2008.

Re- designatio­n would put Pyongyang back on a formal blacklist that would incur more unilateral sanctions.

“The president said he’d make a determinat­ion at the end of the trip,” said White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders.

She spoke as Trump headed to Beijing for talks focused on the North Korea nuclear crisis after visits to US allies Japan and South Korea.

Trump will head to Vietnam on Friday before visiting the Philippine­s from Nov 12-13.

Trump enacted a law in August that was forced on him by the US Congress, pressing for new economic and political sanctions against Iran, Russia and North Korea.

One clause of that act required the US State Department to declare within 90 days whether North Korea should be named a terror sponsor.

The State Department said it calculated the deadline differentl­y but no decision has been made so far.

A senior White House official said North Korea had been removed from the list under Bush “as part of a hopeful attempt to lure them into reversing the threat and of course that didn’t work out.”

“So I would remind that they clearly fit the criteria for statespons­ored terror in a previous administra­tion,” the official said on condition of anonymity.

In Beijing, Trump will seek to persuade President Xi Jinping to do more to pressure his country’s Cold War era-ally North Korea to drop its nuclear ambitions.

China has supported a package of tough United Nations economic sanctions and imposed its own financial restrictio­ns.

But the Trump administra­tion says it could do more to reduce trade with North Korea, whose commerce overwhelmi­ngly relies on its wealthier neighbour.

“I think that if you look at the activity across that (China-North Korea) border, certainly there is still some trade taking place,” the US official said.

“There are still some financial links that exist that should not under those resolution­s. And of course China is doing much more than it’s ever done in the past,” the official said. — AFP

 ??  ??
 ?? — Reuters photo ?? A pro-Trump activist (right) attempt to stop anti-Trump protesters near the South Korean National Assembly, in Seoul, South Korea.
— Reuters photo A pro-Trump activist (right) attempt to stop anti-Trump protesters near the South Korean National Assembly, in Seoul, South Korea.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia