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UN chief welcomes reopened Korean hot line

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UNITED NATIONS — UN Secretary- General Antonio Guterres on Wednesday welcomed the reopening of a hot line between North and South Korea, and voiced hope for more diplomatic initiative­s to end the peninsula’s nuclear standoff.

North and South Korea earlier Wednesday reopened the communicat­ion channel that had been shut since 2016, following an offer from North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un to send a team to next month’s Winter Olympics in South Korea.

“It is always a positive developmen­t to have a dialogue between the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea and the Republic of Korea,” said UN spokesman Farhan Haq.

Mr. Guterres “welcomes the reopening of the inter-Korean communicat­ion channel,” he added.

UN Security Council resolution­s call for the denucleari­zation of the Korean peninsula and “we hope that enhanced diplomatic initiative­s will help to achieve that goal,” said Mr. Haq.

South Korea has offered to hold talks with the North on Jan. 9 to discuss “matters of mutual interest” including the North’s Olympic participat­ion.

Mr. Guterres’ support for inter- Korean dialogue stood in contrast to remarks from US Ambassador Nikki Haley, who on Tuesday dismissed the overtures between Pyongyang and Seoul as a “Band-Aid.”

The US, backed by Japan, is pushing for sanctions and total isolation of Mr. Kim’s regime in response to a series of missile launches and nuclear tests.

Russia, and North Korea’s sole major ally China, have repeatedly called for talks to de-escalate tensions, but the US has been adamant that Pyongyang must first freeze its military programs.

Ms. Haley warned on Tuesday that if Pyongyang carries out another missile test, it would face the likelihood of even more sanctions.

The Security Council adopted a new raft of sanctions on Dec. 22 to restrict oil supplies to North Korea — the third set of measures imposed on Pyongyang in a year. —

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