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Culture & Politics » soc.culture.china » China, Russia Restrain Rash U.S., Japanese Interests. North Korea Determined to be Free
China, Russia Restrain Rash U.S., Japanese Interests. North Korea Determined to be Free [message #225043] Fr, 14 Juli 2006 06:21
Turin  
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060712/ts_nm/korea_north_dc


China-Russia offer rival UN resolution on N Korea
By Evelyn Leopold
Wed Jul 12, 3:33 PM ET



UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - China and Russia introduced a U.N. Security
Council resolution on Wednesday that would urge North Korea to suspend
its nuclear program but avoid mandatory weapons-related sanctions as
sought by Japan.

Japan, backed by the United States, Britain and France welcomed the new
draft and said it moved closer to their position but fell short.

No vote has been scheduled on either draft after China threatened to
veto the Japanese document, especially while a high-level Beijing
delegation was negotiating in Pyongang over North Korea's seven missile
launches on July 5.

China's delegation has told North Koreans what they should do to ensure
diplomacy succeeded, China's U.N. Ambassador Wang Guangya said. "So far
we have not received any feedback from the North Korea leadership,"
Wang told reporters.

Japan's U.N. Ambassador Kenzo Oshima welcomed the Chinese-Russian
initiative but said "a quick glance shows that there are very serious
gaps on very important issues."

"But I doubt very much whether it will be a text that will meet the
support of the co-sponsors," Oshima said. "I think it will be difficult
for us to accept that as it is."

The Chinese-Russia text "strongly deplores" the multiple missile
launches by North Korea and urges, rather than demands, that Pyongang
to re-establish a moratorium.

It also softens the sanctions provision by calling on U.N. members to
"exercise vigilance," rather than insisting that they prevent the
supply of materials, goods and technologies that could contribute to
North Korea's missile program.

It also excludes a determination in the Japanese draft that North
Korea's actions threatened international peace and security under
Chapter 7 of the U.N. Charter. This provision makes a resolution
mandatory and can be followed legally by military action, but only if
another resolution is adopted.

Russia's U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin said the Russian-Chinese draft
resolution went "a long way" toward meeting concerns of those who back
the Japanese resolution.

In Moscow, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov criticized Japan as
saying "that all countries have to vote as Japan wants," Interfax news
agency reported. "I think this is absolutely unacceptable."

China's Wang said he would veto the Japanese proposal. "If that draft
is put to a vote, without any modifications, the instructions to me is
to veto it," he told reporters, the first time he has announced such
plans.

U.S. Ambassador John Bolton said he and others were prepared to put the
Japanese resolution to a vote at the appropriate time.

Asked what would happen if China cast a veto, Bolton said, "There are
times when you just need to make people raise their hands and show
where they stand."

The delegation of senior Chinese officials remains in Pyongyang until
Friday holding talks on the international standoff. It is seeking to
end missile launches from North Korea and draw the isolated Communist
state back to six-party disarmament talks aimed at stopping its nuclear
ambitions.

U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill told reporters in
Paris that Washington and Beijing held a "common purpose"

"China's really trying, we're trying, everyone's trying, except
unfortunately the DPRK (North Korea)," Hill said. He was speaking in
Beijing after meetings with Chinese officials who have urged North
Korea back to talks.

The six-party talks between the two Koreas, China, Japan, Russia and
the United States have been stalled since November because Pyongyang
objected to U.S. financial sanctions based on claims North Korea
counterfeited U.S. currency and trafficked drugs.

In the latest sign of strains over North Korea, Beijing Wednesday urged
Washington to resolve its dispute with Pyongyang over the financial
sanctions.

"It's affecting the progress of the six-party talks and we hope that it
will be clarified and resolved as quickly as possible," China's Foreign
Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao told reporters.

(With additional reporting by Chris Buckley in Beijing, Jack Kim in
Pusan, Ian Ransom and Benjamin Kang Lim in Beijing and Irwin Arieff at
the United Nations)







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