Leaders call for renewed efforts to counter growing nuclear threat on Korean peninsula
Leaders of the two biggest powers in
Southeast Asia called Wednesday for more international commitment
against nuclear danger posed by North Korea.
In separate addresses during the UN
General Assembly, Chinese premier Li Keqiang and Japanese Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe urged the Security Council to be more decisive against the
nuclear ambitions of the isolated nation.
“Now is the time for the Security Council
to indicate an unmistakable attitude towards this threat of a new
dimension,” Abe said. “The threat to the international community has
become increasingly grave and all the more realistic. It demands a new
means of addressing it, altogether different from what we applied until
yesterday.”
Meanwhile, Li urged new efforts to "reach a
comprehensive political solution on the Korean nuclear issue," a
further indication of Beijing’s growing disapproval of its old ally’s
provocative behavior.
North Korea has been defiant in the face of mounting international pressure for continued nuclear tests.
Pyongyang conducted its fifth-ever nuclear test Sept. 9, which triggered a magnitude-5.3 earthquake on the Korean peninsula.
The country’s state-run media reported
Tuesday a "successful" test of a powerful new engine, fueling
speculation it may launch a long-range rocket in line with the
anniversary of its ruling party’s founding in less than three weeks.
After the rocket test, the U.S. army
repeated a show of force by landing a nuclear-capable B-1B supersonic
bomb in South Korea -- its close ally in the region.
The UN Security Council is yet to agree on an enhanced package of sanctions against Pyongyang.
http://www.worldbulletin.net/china-japan-ask-security-council-to-do-more-on-nkorea/177626/china-japan-ask-security-council-to-do-more-on-nkorea
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