Call & Times

UN hits NKorea with tough new sanctions

-

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The U.N. Security Council unanimousl­y approved tough new sanctions Saturday to punish North Korea for its escalating nuclear and missile programs, including a ban on coal and other exports worth over $1 billion – a huge bite in its total exports, valued at $3 billion last year.

U.S. Ambassador Nikki Haley called the resolution "the single largest economic sanctions package ever leveled against the North Korean regime" and "the most stringent set of sanctions on any country in a generation."

But she warned that it is not enough and "we should not fool ourselves into thinking we have solved the problem – not even close."

"The threat of an outlaw nuclearize­d North Korean dictatorsh­ip remains ... (and) is rapidly growing more dangerous," Haley told council members after the vote.

The U.S.-drafted resolution, negotiated with North Korea's neighbor and ally China, is aimed at increasing economic pressure on Pyongyang to return to negotiatio­ns on its nuclear and missile programs – a point stressed by all 15 council members in speeches after the vote.

The Security Council has already imposed six rounds of sanctions that have failed to halt North Korea's drive to improve its ballistic missile and nuclear weapons capabiliti­es. The resolution's adoption follows North Korea's first successful tests of interconti­nental ballistic missiles capable of reaching the United States on July 3 and July 27.

It condemns the launches "in the strongest terms" and reiterates previous calls for North Korea to suspend all ballistic missile launches and abandon its nuclear weapons and nuclear program "in a complete, verifiable and irreversib­le manner."

The centerpiec­e is a ban on North Korea exports of coal, iron, lead and seafood products

– and a ban on all countries importing these products, estimated to be worth over $1 billion in hard currency.

The resolution also bans countries from giving any additional permits to North Korean laborers – another source of money for Kim Jong Un's regime. And it prohibits all new joint ventures with North Korean companies and bans new foreign investment in existing ones.

It adds nine North Koreans, mainly officials or representa­tives of companies and banks, to the U.N. sanctions blacklist, banning their travel and freezing their assets. It also imposes an asset freeze on two companies and two banks.

A Security Council diplomat, who was not authorized to speak publicly and insisted on anonymity, called the newly sanctioned Foreign Trade Bank "a very critical clearing house for foreign exchange."

The Mansudae Overseas Project Group of Companies, which was also added to the blacklist, is described in the resolution as engaged in exporting workers for constructi­on, including of monuments, in Africa and Southeast Asia. The resolution asks the Security Council committee monitoring sanctions against North Korea to ban the import of many more so-called dualuse items, which have commercial purposes but can also be used in convention­al, biological, chemical or nuclear weapons.

It also gives the committee a green light to designate specific vessels that are breaking sanctions from entering ports all over the world and to work with Interpol to enforce travel bans on North Koreans on the sanctions blacklist.

The resolution expresses regret at North Korea's "massive diversion of its scarce resources toward its developmen­t of nuclear weapons and a number of expensive ballistic missile programs" – a point stressed by Haley.

It notes U.N. findings that well over half the population lacks sufficient food and medical care, while a quarter suffers from chronic malnutriti­on.

"These sanctions will cut deep, and in doing so will give the North Korean leadership a taste of the deprivatio­ns they have chosen to inflict on the North Korean people," Haley said. "Revenues aren't going toward feeding its people. Instead, the North Korean regime is literally starving its people and enslaving them in mines and factories in order to fund these illegal missile programs."

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States