The Korea Times

US may relist NK as ‘terrorism sponsor’

- By Choi Ha-young hayoung.choi@ktimes.com

National Assembly Committee on National Defense Chairman Rep. Kim Young-woo has asked the U.S. Congress to re-designate North Korea as a state sponsor of terrorism.

In a letter to Sen. John McCain, chairman of the U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee, Kim of the Bareun Party said, “I earnestly request the Senate committee to work harder towards relisting North Korea as a state sponsor of terrorism.”

“The U.S. is no safe haven from North Korea’s potential terrorist attacks as the country is now home to many North Korean refugees and human rights activists,” he said.

In a party meeting, Kim said it appears certain that the North Korean embassy was involved in the assassinat­ion of Kim Jong-nam in Malaysia.

“This crime was orchestrat­ed by the Kim Jong-un regime,” he said.

Following the assassinat­ion on Feb. 13, Seoul has beefed up security for anti-Pyongyang activists and defectors, including Thae Yong-ho, North Korea’s former deputy ambassador to Britain.

If relisted, trade conditions for North Korea will become much tougher, in addition to the internatio­nal sanctions imposed on the country for its nuclear and missile developmen­ts.

“Through relisting, the U.S. can keep a close eye on internatio­nal aid provided to North Korea and monitor its overseas activities in cooperatio­n with Interpol,” Kim told The Korea Times.

North Korea was labeled a state sponsor of terrorism in 1988 after its agents bombed a South Korean aircraft a year before. Under former President George W. Bush, the U.S. lifted the designatio­n in 2008, in response to Pyongyang’s pledge to allow the internatio­nal community to verify its nuclear facilities.

Calls are also mounting in the U.S. to put the totalitari­an nation back on the list, after the assassinat­ion of the half-brother of its leader Kim Jong-un at an airport in Kuala Lumpur.

On Thursday, Sen. Cory Gardner moved to relist North Korea, criticizin­g its “brutality,” as seen by the assassinat­ion.

“I formally asked the Treasury Department to work with the State Department to investigat­e whether North Korea meets the criteria for re-designatio­n,” Sen. Gardner told Yonhap.

Following the attack to remove the young leader’s potential rival, North Korea faced trade retaliatio­n from China, which suspended North Korean coal imports.

Further, diplomatic ties between Malaysia and North Korea are likely to fall apart. Regarding North Korea’s continuous buck-passing, a Malaysian government minister called North Korea a “rogue state.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Korea, Republic