Bangkok Post

Pyongyang seeks end to sanctions

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SEOUL: North Korean state media called on the United States to drop sanctions yesterday, saying Pyongyang had demonstrat­ed good faith by ending its nuclear weapons testing and handing over the remains of US troops killed in the Korean War.

The statements came just days after a confidenti­al United Nations report concluded North Korea has not stopped its nuclear and missile programmes, in breach of UN resolution­s.

North Korea and the United States vowed to work to end Pyongyang’s weapons programmes at a landmark summit in June in Singapore, but have struggled to reach an agreement to accomplish that goal.

The North’s state media accused Washington of “acting opposite” to its plan to improve ties, despite Pyongyang making goodwill gestures, including a moratorium on nuclear and missile tests, the dismantlin­g of a nuclear site, and the return of the remains of US soldiers killed in the 1950-53 Korean War.

Such “practical measures” had already deprived UN Security Council resolution­s of their reason for being, said the Rodong Sinmun, a ruling Workers’ Party mouthpiece.

“There have been outrageous arguments coming out of the US State Department that it won’t ease sanctions until a denucleari­sation is completed, and reinforcin­g sanctions is a way to raise its negotiatin­g power,” the newspaper said in an editorial.

“How can the sanctions that the administra­tion has brandished as part of its hostile policy against us, promote the two countries’ amity?”

The editorial, which was run along with front page articles and photos of leader Kim Jong-un’s visit to a catfish farm in a display of his shift in focus to the economy, was a fresh sign of Pyongyang’s frustratio­n over the slow-moving nuclear negotiatio­ns.

Under US President Donald Trump, the United States pushed the United Nations to impose tough sanctions on North Korea as Mr Kim conducted a string of missile and nuclear tests last year.

North Korea’s propaganda websites also urged the United States to build trust.

One outlet, Uriminzokk­iri, lambasted the sanctions and pressure campaign as “anachronis­tic” and a hurdle for better relations, calling for efforts to officially declare an end to the Korea War.

The Korean War ended in an armistice, not a peace treaty, leaving the US-led United Nations forces, including South Korea, technicall­y still at war with the North.

The State Department has said it is committed to building a peace mechanism, but only after the North abandons its nuclear programme.

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