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Seoul
ready to follow sanctions on NKorea for "unpardonable" test
By Jun Kwanwoo
AFP
SEOUL
Petroleumworld.com
10 15 06
South Korea, a key economic supporter of North Korea, pledged Sunday
to enforce new United Nations sanctions on its communist neighbour for
what it called an "unpardonable and provocative" nuclear test.
A foreign ministry statement said Seoul "welcomes and supports"
the resolution adopted unanimously Saturday by the UN Security Council.
"The government, as a United Nations member, respects the UN Security
Council resolution and confirms it will sincerely implement this,"
it said.
Deputy ministers were holding talks Sunday at the presidential office
to discuss how to put the sanctions into effect. Separate higher-level
talks were to be held later in the day.
"The government will closely cooperate with the UN and cope with
this incident in a cool-headed and resolute manner," said Prime
Minister Han Myeong-Sook.
"North Korea should bear all the consequences of the nuclear test,"
she said at a festival for defectors from the North. "It is an
unpardonable and provocative act that threatens stability in Northeast
Asia and the global order."
Protesters, some wearing gas masks, burnt North Korean flags during
a rally in a Seoul park.
Although North Korea said last week that any tough sanctions imposed
by the international community would be seen as a "declaration
of war", a glimmer of hope remained for a diplomatic settlement.
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Alexeyev, Moscow's top nuclear
negotiator, was to meet his South Korean counterpart Chun Yung-Woo in
Seoul late Sunday to discuss efforts to revive stalled six-nation disarmament
talks.
Alexeyev, who met last week with his North Korean counterpart Kim Kye-Kwan
in Pyongyang, said the North wants the talks to resume.
"The North Korean side repeatedly insisted that the six-sided process
should continue, that it is not rejecting six-sided negotiations, and
that the aim of the full denuclearization of the Korean peninsula remains,"
he said, according to Russia's Interfax news agency.
The South Korean foreign ministry statement, which reiterated Seoul's
policy never to tolerate a nuclear-armed North Korea, urged it "to
return immediately to six-nation talks" following its declared
test on October 9.
At talks in September last year, the North agreed to give up its nuclear
program in exchange for energy and economic aid and security guarantees.
But it has boycotted the forum since November in protest at US financial
restrictions.
The UN Security Council, which already imposed missile-related sanctions
on the North following its July missile tests, on Saturday broadened
those measures.
The new resolution demands the elimination of all North Korean nuclear
weapons, weapons of mass destruction and ballistic missiles.
It provides for a travel ban on officials working on such programmes
and calls for a ban targeting missiles, tanks, large artillery systems,
warships and combat aircraft.
It also provides for inspection of cargo to and from the communist state.
But Kim Geun-Tae, chairman of South Korea's ruling Uri Party, urged
Seoul not to take part in cargo searches, which he said could spark
an armed clash.
"Discussions are underway. We will take appropriate measures in
line with the UN resolution," foreign ministry spokesman Choo Kyu-Ho
told AFP. He refused to give details.
South Korea has said its "sunshine" engagement policy with
the North is under threat following Pyongyang's shock announcement that
it had carried out a test, but has given no details of any new measures.
Seoul is a major aid donor and also operates two inter-Korean projects
-- the Kaesong industrial estate and the Mount Kumgang tourist resort
-- which earn the cash-strapped North tens of millions of dollars a
year.
Last year it was the biggest food donor after China for the impoverished
state.
But the main opposition party and street protesters are demanding an
end to the aid as well as the Kaesong and Kumgang projects. Critics
say they could help finance the nuclear programme and other weapons
of mass destruction.
AFP
15 0755 GMT 10 06
Copyright
©2006 AFP.
All Rights Reserved.
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