N.Korea blames US for stalemate (AP) Updated: 2006-03-13 14:59
SEOUL South Korea - North Korea accused the United States on Monday of
creating obstacles in nuclear disarmament talks by making what the North said
were false allegations of illegal activities by the country such as
counterfeiting and drug trafficking.
"The basic stumbling block to
resumption of the six-party talks and resolution of the nuclear issue is the
United States' hostile policy toward North Korea," the North's communist party
newspaper, Rodong Sinmun, said in a commentary carried by the official Korean
Central News Agency.
"Every time there are signs of progress at the
six-party talks, the U.S. has created obstacles ... with fabricated problems of
human rights, currency counterfeiting and drug trafficking," the newspaper said.
"It is clear that while the U.S. talks about resuming six-party talks on the
surface, in reality, it has no interest" in resolving the nuclear issue, it
said.
North Korea has refused to resume the six-nation talks on ending
its nuclear ambitions since November, demanding that Washington lift financial
restrictions imposed on a Macau bank and North Korean companies for alleged
complicity in counterfeiting and money laundering.
U.S. and North Korean
officials met in New York last week over the U.S. restrictions, but failed to
produce any breakthrough. Washington says the financial actions are separate
from the nuclear talks.
The North said in Monday's commentary that a
"resumption of the six-party talks and resolution of the nuclear issue depends
entirely on the U.S. attitude."
South Korea, meanwhile, dispatched its
top nuclear envoy, Chun Young-woo, to Japan on Monday for talks on how to
jump-start the stalled nuclear negotiations.
Chun was to meet his
Japanese counterpart, Kenichiro Sasae, on Tuesday to assess recent developments
and discuss ways to reopen the negotiations, the South Korean Foreign Ministry
said.
Also Monday, Russia's top diplomat in South Korea called for the
U.S. and North Korea to seek a compromise to resolve the issue.
"Both
sides may need more flexibility in approach," Ambassador Gleb Ivashentsov told
foreign correspondents in Seoul. Still, he expressed optimism over the nuclear
talks, saying "we view that some positive signs may come up" after the New York
meeting.
In September, the North pledged to give up its nuclear program
in exchange for aid and security guarantees, but no progress has since been made
since then on implementing the agreement. The nuclear talks involve the two
Koreas, China, Russia, Japan and the United States.
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