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NUKEWARS
North Korea vows to bolster nuclear deterrent
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) May 22, 2012


China probes seizure of fishermen by N. Koreans
Beijing (AFP) May 22, 2012 - Beijing said Tuesday it was investigating the seizure of 28 Chinese fishermen by armed North Koreans, as it gave its clearest indication yet that state forces may have played a role.

The men were seized as they fished in waters running between China and North Korea on May 8, and held for 13 days before they were released at the weekend, according to earlier reports.

Neither country has identified the abductors, and China has been unusually tight-lipped on the incident, which comes at a sensitive time in its relations with its nuclear-armed northern neighbour.

But Chinese media have pointed the finger at North Korea's coast guard and on Tuesday, the foreign ministry said Beijng had negotiated with Pyongyang to secure the fishermen's release.

"The Chinese side also urged the Democratic People's Republic of Korea to follow the relevant stipulations of the China-DPRK consular agreement to properly handle issues," spokesman Hong Lei told a regular news briefing.

That agreement includes the right to consular visits with its nationals, he said, but gave no further details.

"China's fishery department is carrying out an investigation into the details of this case," he added.

China is North Korea's key source of economic support, but Beijing has appeared at a loss as to how to rein in recent provocative behaviour by the isolated state.

The abductions came after Beijing criticised a recent North Korean rocket launch and expressed concern over a nuclear weapons test reportedly being readied by the isolated nation.

Chinese media originally said the men were taken by a group of armed "kidnappers" and put their number at 29, but this was later revised to 28.

North Korea vowed Tuesday to bolster its nuclear deterrent and take "self-defence" measures unless the United States halts criticism and pressure over its rocket launches and atomic programme.

A foreign ministry spokesman was hitting back at a statement Saturday from Washington and other Group of Eight nations, which condemned Pyongyang's April 13 long-range rocket launch.

The G8 said it would press for United Nations action -- an apparent reference to tougher sanctions -- in response to any further launches or to a nuclear test.

The North, in the spokesman's statement on official media, said its nuclear deterrent was developed as a response to US hostility and "we will expand and bolster it non-stop as long as this hostile policy goes on".

It said that "from the beginning" it had not envisaged "such a military measure as a nuclear test", since the aim of its launch was to put a scientific satellite into orbit for peaceful purposes.

The UN Nations Security Council strongly condemned the failed launch as breaching a ban on testing ballistic missile technology, and tightened existing sanctions.

Washington was now talking about a possible nuclear test by Pyongyang in an attempt to incite confrontation, the North's statement said.

"If the US persists in its moves to ratchet up sanctions and pressure upon us despite our peace-loving efforts, we will be left with no option but to take counter-measures for self-defence," it said, without specifying whether a nuclear test was now one of the options.

The North responded with nuclear tests after the UN imposed sanctions against its rocket launches in 2006 and 2009.

Satellite photos last month showed work under way at its atomic test site but gave no indication of whether or when a test would be staged.

The North insists that what it called a satellite launch did not breach a February deal with the United States. This promised a suspension of uranium enrichment, and a moratorium on nuclear and missile tests, in return for 240,000 tonnes of US food aid.

The US suspended plans to start food deliveries after the launch, saying it could no longer trust the North. But the North said Tuesday it would continue exercising "our sovereign right" to launch satellites for peaceful purposes.

It said a peaceful negotiated solution to the nuclear issue was still possible if the US dropped its hostile policy.

The statement said Pyongyang had notified Washington "several weeks ago" that it was still exercising restraint, even though it was no longer bound by the February accord.

"North Korea is sending a message to the United States that it must honour its earlier (February) deal," said Baek Seung-Joo of South Korea's Korea Institute for Defence Analyses.

"Today's statement prompts me to believe that there will be no nuclear test for a while as it comes under strong pressure from the international community," Baek told AFP.

"It indicates North Korea wants negotiations with the United States. However, North Korea will go ahead with a nuclear test if the US sticks to its tough line."

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NUKEWARS
Sailors held in N. Korea return to China: Xinhua
Beijing (AFP) May 21, 2012
All 29 Chinese fishermen reportedly kidnapped by armed North Koreans earlier this month have returned home after they were freed at the weekend, the state Xinhua news agency said Monday. The men were snatched by a group of unidentified gunmen as they fished in waters running between China and North Korea on May 8, and held for 13 days, according to earlier reports and witness accounts given ... read more


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