PHNOM PENH: North Korea insisted on Thursday it needs atomic weaponry to deter a US
nuclear threat, and vowed never to give up its right to launch rockets as part
of what it called a peaceful space programme.
Washington's aim is to
"eliminate the political ideology and system our people have opted
for", Foreign Minister Pak Ui-Chun told a regional Asian gathering in
Cambodia, according to a summary given to reporters by his delegation.
North Korea's launch of a long-range
rocket on April 13 heightened regional tensions and sank a deal with the United
States reached on February 29.
Under that agreement, the North
had agreed to freeze its uranium enrichment plant and suspend nuclear and
missile tests, while the US promised 240,000 tonnes of food aid.
The US and its allies described
the rocket launch as a disguised missile test, while the North said its aim was
only to put a satellite into orbit. The rocket failed soon after takeoff.
Pak, according to the summary, told
fellow foreign ministers at the ASEAN Regional Forum that it was the US which
scuppered the February 29 deal and was to blame for tensions on the Korean
peninsula.
The United States, Japan and
South Korea held a joint meeting on Thursday which warned that "any
provocation by North Korea... will be met with a resolute and coordinated
response from the international community".
It also expressed "deep
concern about the well-being of the North Korean people and the grave human
rights situation in North Korea".
Pak, in his comments to the
gathering in Phnom Penh, cited the use of a North Korean flag as a target
during a major US-South Korean live-fire exercise in the South as a "clear
proof of the hostile intent of the US".
It said the North would never give
up its sovereign right "to explore and utilise the outer space and to
develop nuclear energy for peaceful purpose" by building light water
reactors to generate electricity.
Pyongyang says its uranium
enrichment plant is intended to fuel light water reactors to generate power.
Scientists say the plant could easily be reconfigured to produce bomb-making
material, supplementing its current plutonium programme.
Pyongyang's atomic deterrent had
helped maintain the regional nuclear balance and reduced the risk of atomic
war, it said. "We need to safeguard our sovereignty from constant nuclear
threats of the US."
The paper reiterated calls for a
peace treaty with the United States to replace the armistice which ended the
1950-1953 Korean War.
Six-party talks, which envisage a
peace treaty and other benefits if the North scraps its atomic weaponry, have
been stalled since December 2008.
- AFP/ir
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