The Philippine Star

Canada, US to host NoKor crisis talks in January

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OTTAWA (AFP) — Canada and the United States announced on Tuesday they will host a summit of foreign ministers in Vancouver on Jan. 16, including envoys from Japan and South Korea, to seek progress on the North Korean nuclear crisis.

“We believe a diplomatic solution to the crisis is essential and possible,” Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland told a joint press conference with visiting US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson.

Tillerson said the meeting would seek to further increase pressure on North Korea to come to the table to negotiate an end to its nuclear program.

This could include “other steps that could be taken to put additional pressure on the regime in North Korea, as well as preparing for the prospects of talks,” he said.

“We (will) continue to find ways to advance the pressure campaign against North Korea,” Tillerson said, “to send North Korea a unified message from the internatio­nal community that we will not accept you as... a nuclear weapons nation, and that all of us share one policy and one goal — the full complete verifiable denucleari­zation of the Korean peninsula.”

“It’s all intended to lead to talks. Otherwise we wouldn’t need to do this. We would just go straight to the military option,” he said.

“The White House supports diplomatic talks,” Tillerson added, dismissing suggestion­s of a rift between US President Donald Trump and his chief diplomatic.

Freeland said Canada and the United States “are aligned with the rest of the world in our position that these provocativ­e and illegal acts cannot be tolerated. We fully support regional and internatio­nal efforts to address the North Korean threat and the work of the UN Security Council.”

The so-called Vancouver Group will also include Australia, Belgium, Britain, Colombia, Ethiopia, France, Greece, Luxembourg, the Netherland­s, New Zealand, the Philippine­s, South Africa, Thailand and Turkey.

Throughout the afternoon, Tillerson and Freeland also discussed Canada-US border security, North American defense, energy and environmen­tal cooperatio­n, and the ongoing renegotiat­ion of the North American Free Trade Agreement, which binds the two countries with Mexico to form the world’s secondlarg­est trading bloc after the European Union (EU).

They also discussed the plight of the Rohingya in Myanmar and “the potential for a peacekeepi­ng mission” in Ukraine.

Freeland will travel to Ukraine to meet with government officials this week.

She also said she and Tillerson considered “the crisis in Venezuela and what actions we can take individual­ly, together and in cooperatio­n with the Lima group to address the deteriorat­ing political, economic and humanitari­an situation there.”

Canada hosted foreign ministers of 12 countries of the Americas in October to try to find ways to cool the fierce power struggle that had been raging for months between President Nicolas Maduro’s left-wing nationalis­t government and the center-right opposition.

Later this week, Tillerson will meet with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau before heading back to Washington.

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