China calls on the US to correct its mistake over North Korea sanctions.

0

In the news, as reported by the USA TODAY News post, the U.S. has wrongfully imposing new sanctions on Chinese and Russian companies and on individuals accused of helping North Korea.

In the report, China has raised concern, urging ‘the United States on Wednesday to immediately withdraw sanctions that Washington imposed on Beijing as part of its efforts to pressure North Korea into halting development of its missile and nuclear weapons program.

In a news conference, as reported on USA TODAY, Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told reporters that the country “especially opposes any country conducting ‘long-arm jurisdiction’ over Chinese entities and individuals.”

The Minister added that: “Measures taken by the United States are not helpful in solving the problem and unhelpful to mutual trust and cooperation. We ask the United States to correct its mistake immediately.”

The White House on Tuesday, however, ‘unveiled new sanctions on 10 companies and six individuals from mostly China and Russia who it says helped North Korea develop its nuclear and ballistic missile programs.’ According to them, ‘the new sanctions are the latest in a raft of blacklists — which extend to banks — issued in recent months to punish Chinese and Russian companies that try to evade international efforts to isolate North Korea.’

“We are taking actions consistent with U.N. sanctions to show that there are consequences for defying sanctions and providing support to North Korea, and to deter this activity in the future,” Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin said in a statement.

In addition, Hua, in the reported, disclosed that Chinese authorities would take action themselves if needed and reminded reporters that China was already “comprehensively” implementing U.N. Security Council sanctions on North Korea. “Our efforts are there for all to see,” she said.

“If there are suspected violations of (UN) resolutions on the part of Chinese enterprises and individuals, we will investigate and dispose according to our law.”

From news sources, the White House says the new sanctions are intended to complement the U.N. ones, which target North Korea’s commodity exports, including coal, iron and seafood, as well as its use of financial services firms and joint ventures with foreign companies.

As against this background, USA TODAY, on Tuesday, reports that, Russia’s foreign ministry said it was preparing its own counter-measures. “Washington should have learned that for us the language of sanctions is unacceptable,” Sergei Ryabkov, Russia’s deputy foreign minister, said in a statement.

“We haven’t lost hope that the voice of reason will sooner or later triumph and that our American colleagues will realize the futility and harmful nature of the further unwinding of this sanctions spiral.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Correspondent: Ridwan A Olayiwola

Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published.