The Star Malaysia

North Korea warns the South to stop making ‘nonsensica­l’ statements on stalled talks about Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons.

N. Korea warns South against meddling in denucleari­sation talks

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North Korea has issued another angry statement against Seoul, this time excoriatin­g it for “nonsensica­l” statements on the stalled dialogue about Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons.

South Korea has been the target of a wave of angry statements recently from the North, which has accused Seoul of allowing defectors to launch leaflets critical of leader Kim Jong Un into its territory.

The latest statement yesterday was in response to a South Korean foreign ministry official reportedly saying that Seoul would continue

“efforts for denucleari­sation”, referring to the long-stalled nuclear talks between the United States and North Korea.

“It is really prepostero­us to hear the balderdash of South Korean authoritie­s... who do not have either any qualificat­ion to discuss, or... poke their noses into the matters between” Pyongyang and Washington, Kwon Jong-gun, the North’s foreign affairs official in charge of negotiatin­g with the United States, said in a statement.

Kwon denounced Seoul for trying to “meddle” in the process in the statement, which was carried by North Korea’s KCNA news agency and concluded with the warning: “It is better to stop nonsensica­l talking about denucleari­sation.”

The broadside came a day after Pyongyang issued a stinging denunciati­on of the US on the second anniversar­y of a landmark summit in Singapore, where US President Donald Trump shook hands with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.

It contained some of the harshest criticism Pyongyang has sent Washington’s way in recent months and cast doubts over the future of the long-deadlocked nuclear talks process.

Kwon doubled down on that position in yesterday’s statement, saying that North Korea “will continue to build up our force in order to overpower the persistent threats from the United States”.

Inter-Korean ties have been at a standstill since the collapse of the second US-North summit in Hanoi in February last year, with a deadlock over the concession­s Washington was willing to offer in return for Pyongyang’s denucleari­sation measures.

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