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Japan’s Abe: North Korea must take real steps to denuclearization

Japan’s Abe: North Korea must take real steps to denuclearization
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe greet South Korea’s intelligence chief Suh Hoon at the start of their meeting on Tuesday in Tokyo. (AP)
Updated 13 March 2018

Japan’s Abe: North Korea must take real steps to denuclearization

Japan’s Abe: North Korea must take real steps to denuclearization

TOKYO: Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe met with South Korea’s intelligence chief on Tuesday and said that while he welcomes any dialogue with North Korea regarding the country’s denuclearization, the North must take action as well.
“I believe it is extremely important that North Korea takes concrete actions to achieve what it has said,” Abe said at the beginning of talks with South Korean intelligence chief Suh Hoon.
President Donald Trump has agreed to meet North Korean leader Kim Jong Un by May, and South Korean President Moon Jae-in is set to meet Kim in late April.
Suh is in Tokyo to brief Japanese officials on developments. He was part of a South Korean delegation that met Kim in Pyongyang last week. Another senior member of the delegation has briefed Chinese officials in Beijing.
“I think it was very meaningful that Workers Party of Korea Chairman Kim Jong Un expressed his intentions toward denuclearization in his own words,” Suh said. He said he hoped to convey Moon’s message that cooperation between the two countries is crucial to push forward a move toward peace on the Korean Peninsula.
On Monday, Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono, after meeting with Suh, credited recent changes in North Korea’s position to increased pressure by the international community, and said the pressure must continue until the North fulfills its promises with concrete actions.
In Beijing on Monday, South Korea’s national security director, Chung Eui-yong, met with Chinese President Xi Jinping and praised his role in contributing to the recent positive changes on the Korean Peninsula. Xi told Chung the peninsula was “facing an important opportunity of mitigation and dialogue,” according to Chinese state broadcaster CCTV.
North Korea’s foreign trade, more than 90 percent of which passes through China, has taken a hit since Beijing agreed to increasingly harsh UN Security Council resolutions aimed at pressuring the North into ceasing its nuclear and missile tests and rejoining denuclearization talks.