The Manila Times

NKorea hits ally China over coal import ban

- AFP

SEOUL: North Korea denounced its chief ally and diplomatic protector China for “dancing to the tune of the US” after it banned coal imports in apparent punishment for a missile launch.

Beijing and Pyongyang have a relationsh­ip forged in the blood of the Korean War, but ties have begun to fray in recent years, with China increasing­ly exasperate­d by its wayward neighbor’s nuclear antics.

Last week it announced the suspension of all coal imports from the North—a crucial foreign currency earner for Pyongyang for the rest of the year.

It came days after a missile launch personally overseen by leader Kim Jong-Un in what was force against new US President Donald Trump.

A bylined essay carried by the Agency slammed Beijing’s move.

It did not identify China by name, referring instead to “a neighborin­g country.”

“This country, styling itself a big power, is dancing to the tune of the US,” it said.

“It has unhesitati­ngly taken inhumane steps such as totally blocking foreign trade related to the improvemen­t of people’s living standard,” it added.

“Righteous voices” had condemned the move, it said, while “the hostile forces are shouting ‘bravo’ over this.”

The format was unusual for KCNA, which tends not to carry editorials or commentari­es of its own, preferring to reproduce those of Rodong Sinmun, Workers’ Party.

The tone was also more akin to Pyongyang’s denunciati­ons of the US.

It was “utterly childish” to think that the North would stop its nuclear weapons and interconti­nental ballistic missile programs if a few pennies of money were cut off, said the KCNA essay.

Its scientists and technician­s were “working hard in do-or-die spirit,” it added.

progress in Pyongyang’s missile technology, Seoul’s military said.

The North—barred under UN resolution­s from any use of ballistic missile technology—staged two atomic tests and many missile tests last year in a quest to develop a nuclear weapon capable of hitting the US mainland.

Trump has described the North as a “big, big problem” and vowed to deal with the issue “very strongly.”

The KCNA article came as the murder in Malaysia of Kim’s halfbrothe­r Kim Jong-Nam, in what is suspected to be a Pyongyang plot, dominates world headlines.

Jong-Nam—the eldest son of the late ruler Kim Jong-Il—died on February 13 after being attacked by two women at a Kuala Lumpur airport, with Malaysian authoritie­s blaming a lethal nerve agent.

The North angrily denied involvemen­t on Thursday, blaming Malaysia for “immoral” handling of the case and for plotting with Seoul to frame Pyongyang.

It did not confirm the dead man’s identity.

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