Pompeo calls for pressure to be maintained on North Korea.
US
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Saturday called for pressure to be maintained
on North Korea as a UN report warned Pyongyang is circumventing tough sanctions
imposed over its nuclear weapons programme.
In
Singapore ahead of a major security forum, Mr. Pompeo said he had urged other
countries to strictly enforce United Nations sanctions against North Korea,
which reports suggest has made slow progress to disarmament following a
landmark June summit.
The US’s
top diplomat said he had “emphasized the importance of maintaining diplomatic
and economic pressure on North Korea to achieve the final, fully verified
denuclearisation that DPRK has agreed to,” using the initials of the North’s
official name.
“I must
say from my meetings here, the world is united in seeing this achieved,” Mr.
Pompeo told a press conference.
“We’re
determined to do it, Chairman Kim is committed to doing it. I’m optimistic that
we will get this done.”
His
comments came as a UN report said on Friday that North Korea has resorted to a
“massive increase” of illegal ship-to-ship transfers of oil products at sea to
evade sanctions.
The
62-page report sent to the Security Council also listed violations of a ban on
North Korean exports including coal, iron and seafood that generate millions of
dollars in revenue for the reclusive regime.
Mr.
Pompeo has met the foreign ministers of China and South Korea in Singapore, as
well as with his Southeast Asian counterparts.
His North
Korean counterpart, Ri Yong Ho, is also in the city-state for the ASEAN
Regional Forum, which takes place later in the day. But Mr. Pompeo said he was
yet to meet with him on the sidelines of the gathering.
At the
summit with President Donald Trump in June, the North’s leader Kim Jong Un signed
up to a vague commitment to “denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula” -- a far
cry from long-standing US demands for complete, verifiable and irreversible
disarmament.
While
there have been small signs of progress since the summit, news reports indicate
Pyongyang is continuing to build rockets and there have been concerns that some
member states are relaxing the enforcement of sanctions on the North.
“We have
seen reports that Russia is allowing for joint ventures with North Korean firms
and granting new work permits to North Korean guest workers,” Mr. Pompeo said.
“If these
reports are proven accurate and we have every reason to believe that they are,
that would be in violation” of UN sanctions, he added.Saturday’s forum, hosted
by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), brings together top
diplomats from 26 countries and the European Union for talks on political and
security issues in the Asia-Pacific.
The
foreign ministers from all nations involved in stalled “six-party” negotiations
with North Korea aimed at reining in Pyongyang’s nuclear programme will be at
the gathering: China, Japan, Russia, South Korea and the US.
Cutting
off oil and fuel to the North would require enforcement primarily by China,
which supplies most of North Korea’s energy needs, but also by Russia, which
delivers some oil to Pyongyang.
Mr.
Pompeo said that during his meetings in Singapore, he called for countries to
“strictly enforce all sanctions including the complete shut down of illegal
ship-to-ship transfers of petroleum”.
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