China Daily Global Edition (USA)

UN envoy heads to DPRK

- By MO JINGXI in Beijing and ZHAO HUANXIN in Washington

The United Nations’ political chief is heading to Pyongyang on Tuesday for a rare four-day visit en route from China, which has called the resurfacin­g of tensions on the Korean peninsula regrettabl­e.

“In response to questions received on the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs Jeffrey Feltman will remain in the Pyongyang area throughout his visit,” the UN said in a statement on Monday, adding that Feltman met with Chinese Vice-Foreign Minister Li Baodong on Monday in Beijing.

The unusual visit of Feltman — he will be only the second such official to visit Pyongyang in seven years — comes amid intensifie­d tensions on the peninsula as Seoul and Washington kicked off their largest-ever fiveday joint military air exercises on Monday, following Pyongyang’s launch of an interconti­nental ballistic missile on Nov 29.

Pyongyang said that the drills would push the already acute situation to the brink of nuclear war, according to the Korean Central News Agency.

All related parties didn’t catch the window of opportunit­y ...” Foreign Minister Wang Yi

“Tensions resurfaced on the peninsula after two months of relative calm, and all related parties didn’t catch the window of opportunit­y that China has appealed for them to take advantage of. China feels regret about it,” Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said at a joint news conference with his Mongolian counterpar­t in Beijing.

The foreign minister also said that while China takes an open-minded attitude toward solutions to the nuclear issue on the Korean Peninsula, all parties should jointly abide by the regulation­s and spirit of Security Council resolution­s.

“The resolution­s represent the common will of the internatio­nal community, and they are the global duties that should be followed by all members,” Wang said.

“Propositio­ns and measures that are against or not included in the resolution­s lack internatio­nal legal support and will jeopardize the execution of UN resolution­s,” he explained.

US Senator Lindsey Graham said on Sunday that he believes it’s time to start moving the families of American military personnel out of South Korea.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said on Monday that China hoped all parties would do more to help ease tensions and avoid provoking each other.

Wang Junsheng, an expert on Korean affairs at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said no party will win by continuall­y flexing its muscles.

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