Muscat Daily

N Korea blames US for tensions in UN talks

During UN official’s visit, Pyongyang also agrees to have regular communicat­ion with the body

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Seoul, South Korea - North Korea blamed US ‘nuclear blackmail’ for soaring tensions over its weapons programme following rare meetings with a senior UN official, but agreed to regular communicat­ion with the organisati­on, state media said on Saturday.

Jeffrey Feltman flew to Beijing on Saturday after wrapping up a five-day visit to Pyongyang aimed at defusing the crisis, just a week after North Korea said it test-fired a new ballistic missile capable of reaching the US.

His trip - the first by a UN diplomat of his rank since 2010 - - saw him meet Foreign Minister Ri Yong-ho and vice foreign minister Pak Myong-kuk, and visit medical facilities supported by the UN, the North's state news agency KCNA said.

‘At these meetings, our side said the US policy of hostility toward the DPRK (North Korea) and its nuclear blackmail are to blame for the current tense situation on the Korean peninsula’, the report said.

It added that the North had agreed with the UN ‘to regularise communicat­ions through visits at various levels’.

The report did not mention any meetings with leader Kim Jong-un, who has ramped up his impoverish­ed nation’s missile and nuclear programme in recent years in order to achieve Pyongyang’s stated goal of developing a warhead capable of hitting the US mainland.

Feltman, the UN’s under-secretary-general for political affairs, visited the country just after the US and South Korea launched their biggest-ever joint air exer- cise. Pyongyang reiterated its view that these manoeuvres were a provocatio­n on Saturday, accusing the drills of ‘revealing its intention to mount a surprise nuclear pre-emptive strike against the DPRK.

The UN Security Council has hit the isolated and impoverish­ed North with a package of sanctions over its increasing­ly powerful missile and nuclear tests, which have rattled Washington and its regional allies South Korea and Japan.

Feltman arrived in Beijing, a key transit point with the North, and left the airport without speaking to reporters.

China, Pyongyang’s sole major diplomatic and military ally, has called on the US to freeze military drills and on North Korea to halt weapons tests.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry on Saturday published a speech from four days ago by foreign minister Wang Yi in which he warned that the Korean Peninsula ‘remains deeply entrenched in a vicious cycle of demonstra- tions of strength and confrontat­ion’.

“The outlook is not optimistic,” Beijing’s top diplomat added.

Emotion-charged days

Pyongyang ramped up already high tensions on the Korean Peninsula at the end of November when it announced it had successful­ly test-fired a new interconti­nental ballistic missile (ICBM), which it says brings the whole of the continenta­l US within range. Analysts say it is unclear whether the missile survived re-entry into the earth’s atmosphere or could successful­ly deliver a warhead to its target - key technologi­cal hurdles for Pyongyang.

US President Donald Trump has engaged in months of tit-fortat rhetoric with Kim, pejorative­ly dubbing him ‘Little Rocket Man’ and a ‘sick puppy’.

Kim has called the 71 year old president a ‘dotard’, meaning a weak or senile old man - an insult that was renewed on Saturday as the North condemned Trump for recognisin­g Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

‘Considerin­g the fact that the mentally deranged dotard openly called for a total destructio­n of a sovereign state at the UN, this action is not so surprising’, KCNA quoted a foreign ministry spokesman as saying.

‘The US will be held accountabl­e for all consequenc­es from this reckless, wicked act.’

The North on Saturday released photograph­s of Kim on the summit of the country’s high- est peak, the fabled 2,750m Mt Paektu, which he climbed to ponder recent successes in his drive for nuclear statehood.

Mount Paektu is considered a sacred place in Korean folklore and plays a central role in the propaganda glorifying the Kim family. Officially, Kim’s father Kim Jong-il was born on its slopes in 1942, though independen­t historians say he was actually born a year earlier and in the Soviet Union, where his own father was in exile.

 ?? (AFP) ?? An undated picture released from North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on Saturday shows Kim Jong-un visiting Mount Paektu in Ryanggang Province
(AFP) An undated picture released from North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on Saturday shows Kim Jong-un visiting Mount Paektu in Ryanggang Province

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