Oman Daily Observer

Putin says ready to help resolve N Korea N-issue

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SEOUL: Russia’s President Vladimir Putin told his newly elected South Korean counterpar­t, Moon Jae-In, in a phone call on Friday that he is ready to play a “constructi­ve role” in resolving North Korea’s nuclear threat, the South’s presidenti­al office said.

Putin made the comment after Moon said the foremost task to boost cooperatio­n between the two countries was to strengthen strategic bilateral communicat­ion to find a solution to curb North Korea’s nuclear threat, the Blue House said in a statement.

“We hope for Russia to play a constructi­ve role in order for North Korea to stop with its nuclear provocatio­ns and go the way of denucleari­sation,” Moon was citing as saying to Putin in the 20-minute conversati­on.

“I, too, aim to find a way to begin talks quickly between North and South Korea as well as the six-party talks,” Moon said, referring to talks aimed at denucleari­zing North Korea involving the United States, China, Japan, Russia and the two Koreas.

The talks collapsed in 2008 after North Korea launched a rocket.

Tension has been high for months on the Korean peninsula over North Korea’s nuclear and missile developmen­t and fears it will conduct a sixth nuclear test or test another ballistic missile in defiance of UN Security Council resolution­s.

Moon is a liberal who advocates a more conciliato­ry approach to North Korea compared with his conservati­ve predecesso­r.

Moon also expressed hopes the two countries would be able to cooperate in developing East Asia, includ- ing extending a natural gas pipeline from Siberia to South Korea, the Blue House said.

Putin said he was ready to help in all of the matters they discussed and the two leaders invited each other for state visits, the Blue House added.

Moon said he would send a special envoy to Russia soon and Putin said he would welcome the envoy.

The two leaders said they looked forward to meeting at the Group of 20 summit meeting in Germany in July.

Earlier in the day, Moon spoke with British Prime Minister Theresa May and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, the Blue House said.

He asked them to help in curbing North Korea’s nuclear programme and both promised to. RARE LETTER OF PROTEST North Korea sent a rare letter of protest to the US House of Representa­tives on Friday warning that a new package of tougher sanctions would only spur its developmen­t of nuclear weapons, North Korea’s state media reported.

The protest was lodged by the recently revived Foreign Affairs Committee of North Korea’s Supreme People’s Assembly, which said the US House of Representa­tives was “obsessed” with a sense of disapprova­l and warned it of dire consequenc­es.

“The US House of Representa­tives should think twice,” the committee said in its letter.

The House of Representa­tives overwhelmi­ngly approved legislatio­n this month to tighten sanctions by targeting North Korea’s shipping industry and companies that do business it.

 ?? — Reuters ?? South Korean President Moon Jae-In poses for selfies with visitors as he visits the Incheon Internatio­nal Airport in Incheon on Friday.
— Reuters South Korean President Moon Jae-In poses for selfies with visitors as he visits the Incheon Internatio­nal Airport in Incheon on Friday.

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