[lbo-talk] North Korea, Japan blame each other for talks snag

uvj at vsnl.com uvj at vsnl.com
Mon Mar 12 08:18:31 PDT 2007


Reuters India

North Korea, Japan blame each other for talks snag http://in.today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2007-03-07T182934Z_01_NOOTR_RTRJONC_0_India-290253-1.xml

Wed Mar 7, 2007

By Teruaki Ueno

HANOI (Reuters) - Japan and North Korea blamed each other for cancellation of a second session of talks in Hanoi on Wednesday aimed at working toward establishing diplomatic relations.

The turbulence contrasted with a meeting in New York on Monday between U.S. officials and a North Korean delegation that an American envoy described as "very good". The two encounters took place as implementation began of a six-nation deal under which the reclusive communist state would start dismantling its nuclear programme in exchange for aid and diplomatic recognition.

A Japanese diplomat said a scheduled Hanoi afternoon meeting failed to take place because the Koreans had "reacted angrily" at the morning session over discussion of the sensitive issue of Pyongyang's abductions of Japanese citizens in the 1970s and 80s.

Japanese and North Korean diplomats met in the morning at the Japanese embassy in the Vietnamese capital.

"In the morning session we conveyed our basic view on the abduction issue in detail," the Japanese diplomat said. "And the afternoon session has not been held because the North Korean side reacted angrily."

Thursday's agenda calls for talks on resuming diplomatic relations, which Tokyo says is impossible without resolution of the abductee issue. Tokyo wants more information from Pyongyang and the return of any survivors. A Tokyo-based newspaper published by North Koreans said in a report from Hanoi that the talks had been suspended because of Japan's "imprudent and hard-line position".

REVIVING THE DEAD?

"If Japan's position is indeed that dead people must be revived and sent back to Japan, then there is no point in sitting down with the Japanese side," a North Korean delegate to the talks was quoted as saying by Choson Sinbo.

North Korea admitted in 2002 that its agents had abducted 13 Japanese, sparking outrage in Japan. Five of those were repatriated and Pyongyang says the other eight are dead.

Highlighting the fierce tensions hanging over any Japan-North Korea encounter, Pyongyang chose the day of the Hanoi talks to issue a stinging official attack on Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

Weighing into a row over Abe's denial that the Japanese Army itself had kidnapped the many thousand Asian women prostituted for its troops during World War Two, North Korea's Foreign Ministry said in a statement:

"The prime minister of a country dares challenge the historical facts and the unbiased public opinion of the international community ... far from humbly repenting of the past crimes with a proper view on history. This clearly indicates how vulgar Japan has become in its conscience and morality."

Asked by reporters in Tokyo about the Hanoi talks, Abe said: "Lots of things happen when negotiating with North Korea. There's no change in our position to seek progress and resolution of the abduction issue in these negotiations."

For its part, North Korea was expected to press for settlement of issues stemming from Japan's harsh 1910-45 colonial rule of the Korean peninsula. "We believe it is favourable for us to build substantial political, economic and cultural relations by settling the unfortunate past and issues of mutual concern," North Korea's negotiator, Song Il-ho, said in his opening statement.

SEEKING TIES

Under the arms-for-aid deal struck in Beijing on Feb. 13, North Korea sent its chief nuclear envoy to the United States and another delegation to Hanoi for talks on establishing ties.

The United States said it had "very good" talks on Tuesday and it appeared that the agreement on ending North Korea's nuclear ambitions was on track for now.

"These were very good discussions," U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill told reporters.

The Beijing deal has also eased tension on the Korean peninsula that had been stoked by Pyongyang's missile and nuclear tests last year. An adviser to South Korea's president, former prime minister Lee Hae-chan, left for Pyongyang on Wednesday to meet the North's nominal number two leader.

The two Koreas remain technically at war, over half a century after the 1950-1953 Korean War ended in an inconclusive truce. (Additional reporting by Jon Herskovitz in Seoul, George Nishiyama in Tokyo and Paul Eckert in New York)

© Reuters 2007. All Rights Reserved.



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