UN, North Korea agree security
situation 'most tense'
NEWS / NUCLEAR WEAPONS
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In a rare show of mutual consent, the
United Nations and North Korea have
both agreed that the current security
situation in the Korean Peninsula is
"the most tense and dangerous" in the
world today.
UN's Under-Secretary-General for
Political Affairs Jeffrey Feltman
wrapped up his four-day trip to North
Korea, where he held a series of
meetings with Pyongyang's officials,
including Foreign Minister Ri Yong-
Ho, on Friday.
The high-profile visit came amid
increasing tensions in the region after
North Korea conducted its latest
ballistic missile test at the end of last
month.
"They exchanged views on the Korean
Peninsula and agreed that the current
situation was the most tense and
dangerous peace and security issue in
the world today," UN Secretary-General
spokesman Stephane Dujarric said in a
statement on Saturday.
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The UN diplomat Feltman noted that
there is a need to "prevent
miscalculations and open channels to
reduce the risks of conflict".
North Korea said its latest test launch,
condemned by China and the US, was
the "most powerful
ICBM [intercontinental ballistic
missile]".
The launch was the first since
September 15, when North Korea fired a
ballistic missile over the Japanese island
Hokkaido, eventually crashing into the
Pacific Ocean.
An emergency meeting by the UN
Security Council was held in response
to the latest test in November, with US
President Donald Trump vowing more
sanctions against North Korea.
Calling for the full implementation of
all relevant Security Council resolutions,
Feltman urged "a diplomatic solution to
the situation, achieved through a
process of sincere dialogue".
"Time is of the essence," he added.
Escalating nuclear tensions in the
region have also cast a shadow over the
upcoming Winter Olympics in South
Korea's PyeongChang.
US presence in the Games is also in
doubt, with the country's ambassador
to the UN, Nikki Haley, calling the
team's participation an "open
question".
No official decision has been made yet,
but the White House said that security
concerns will be taken into
consideration.
On September 3, North Korea
conducted its most powerful nuclear
test ever, detonating a hydrogen bomb
northeast of Pyongyang, the capital.
That test, weeks before the United
Nations General Assembly, angered
global leaders.
The UN Security Council implemented
new economic sanctions on North Korea
as a result of that nuclear test.
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