Japan sanctions Chinese firms to pressure N Korea
TOKYO: Japan yesterday slapped sanctions on two Chinese firms, including a bank accused of laundering North Korean cash, amid concerns Pyongyang is prepping for another missile test, the government said.
Japan has stepped up calls for further sanctions against North Korea since Pyongyang tested an intercontinental ballistic missile earlier this month in defiance of repeated UN resolutions.
The test has raised tensions in the region, pitting Washington, Tokyo and Seoul against China, Pyongyang’s last remaining major ally.
Japan’s move has added further acrimony to often fraught bilateral relations with China and drew a harsh response from Beijing.
Despite being major trading and investment partners they are frequently at odds over a maritime territorial dispute and lingering tensions over Japan’s history of aggression in the first half of the 20th century.
Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida said five entities, including two Chinese organisations, and nine individuals will be put on Japan’s blacklists in connection with ties to North Korea.
They will be “newly subject to asset freezing” and other unilateral punishment, Kishida said without elaborating or naming any of them.
“It is important to strengthen pressure so that North Korea should act toward denuclearisation,” Kishida told reporters.
“We will urge North Korea to take concrete action toward the resolution of issues,” he said.
The Nikkei daily said among the five organisations are China’s Bank of Dandong, a Chinese shipping firm and a North Korean trading house dealing with coal and other commodities The Bank of Dandong is accused of money laundering for North Korea’s nuclear and missile programmes.
China immediately denounced the Japanese sanctions.
“We firmly oppose any other country to impose unilateral sanctions outside the framework of the UN Security Council and we especially oppose the sanctions targeted at Chinese enterprises and individuals,” Lu Kang, spokesman for the Chinese foreign ministry, told a regular press briefing in Beijing.
“I would like to tell Japan that China will not accept the wrongdoing and will require Japan to withdraw this wrong decision,” he said, warning the sanctions will “create major political hurdles for China-Japan relations”. — AFP