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Nuke test worries N. Korea's
neighbors
Seoul -
North Korea faced stern warnings from its neighbors Wednesday against
carrying out an unprecedented nuclear test, but insisted that such a
move wouldn't be meant as a provocation. A top South Korean security
official said there was no sign a test was imminent.
China, Japan and South Korea
announced a series of summits among their leaders, ratcheting up
diplomacy over tensions caused by the North's announcement Tuesday
that it intends to detonate a bomb.
Such a test would confirm the North's
claim that it has atomic capabilities, and would severely undermine
efforts to prevent an Asian nuclear arms race by getting Pyongyang to
disarm.
South Korea's top official on
dealings with the North, Unification Minister Lee Jong-seok, said
Wednesday that there were no definite signs that the test is imminent.
However, Lee also told lawmakers
there was "a high possibility" it would eventually take place if
"efforts to resume the six-party talks fail," Yonhap news agency
reported.
North Korea has boycotted six-nation
nuclear talks with China, Japan, Russia, South Korea and the U.S. for
nearly a year, angered by American financial restrictions imposed over
the North's alleged illegal activities such as money laundering and
counterfeiting.
An official at the North's embassy in
Australia, Pak Myong-guk, who described himself as a minister, said
that Pyongyang's planned nuclear test "is not provocative."
"It is just the corresponding measure
for defense, for us to defend ourselves," Pak told The Associated
Press. "It is the really essential process for nuclear deterrent."
The North often insists it needs
nuclear weapons to deter a U.S. attack.
China — the North's main ally and key
benefactor — appealed on Pyongyang to show calm and restraint, issuing
an unusually pointed statement that referred to North Korea by name.
The statement contrasted with earlier Chinese responses, which have
typically called for restraint from all sides in the dispute.
"We hope the North Korean side will
be sure to keep calm and restrained on the nuclear test issue,"
Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said on the ministry Web site.
South Korea's President Roh Moo-hyun
called for a "cool-headed and stern" response to the North's
announcement, while South Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman Choo Kyu-ho
said a nuclear test by North Korea could cause a change in its
engagement policy toward the communist regime.
"If North Korea pushes ahead with a
nuclear test, North Korea should take full responsibility for all
consequences," Choo said after an emergency meeting of South Korean
security ministers.
Asked to elaborate on what the
consequences would be, Choo said a North Korean nuclear test could
bring about a "shift" in Seoul's engagement policy toward the North,
but also stressed that doesn't mean abandoning that policy altogether.
South Korea has consistently pursued
dialogue with North Korea since their leaders first met in a historic
summit in 2000. That approach has caused a rift with Washington, which
favors a harder line toward the communist regime.
Seoul is one of the main aid
providers to the impoverished North, but it suspended regular relief
shipments after Pyongyang carried out missile tests on July 5.
However, the South later agreed to send emergency aid to help the
North cope with the effects of massive floods that struck the country
in mid-July.
Despite the nuclear test threat, the
South on Wednesday shipped previously promised aid to the North,
including 6,400 tons of cement, the Unification Ministry said.
"As North Korea has yet to conduct a
nuclear test, it is difficult to immediately halt sending flood relief
aid, which is being provided on a humanitarian basis," a ministry
official said on condition of anonymity, citing official policy.
After the missile launches, the U.N.
Security Council unanimously adopted a resolution banning all U.N.
members from missile or missile-related dealings with the North.
South Korean Vice Foreign Minister Yu
Myung-hwan said the Security Council is expected to take stronger
action against Pyongyang if it tests a nuclear weapon.
North Korea "will face a strong and
united response from the international community" if it conducts a
test, Yu told a regular news briefing.
Speaking later to lawmakers, Yu
warned a North Korean nuclear test "could provide a pretext for
Japan's nuclear armament. "
"This will prompt countermoves by
China or Russia and lead to a change in the balance of power in the
Northeast Asia," he said.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe
said "we simply could not accept" a nuclear test by the North.
Abe will head to China on Sunday and
to Seoul on Monday, and Roh will travel to Beijing on Oct. 13.
In Australia, North Korean Ambassador
Chon Jae-hong was summoned to meet senior officials on Wednesday and
"was warned in the strongest possible terms of the severe consequences
should North Korea conduct a nuclear test," Australian Foreign
Minister Alexander Downer said in a statement.
"A nuclear test would be completely
unacceptable to the international community, and would provoke a very
strong international response," Downer said.
The news sent the South Korean stock
market tumbling. The market closed down 1.6 percent Wednesday after
recovering from deeper lows earlier in the day.
Pyongyang has not conducted any known
test to prove its claim that it has nuclear weapons. Some experts
believe the North has enough fissile material to build a half-dozen or
more nuclear bombs, though there are doubts about whether it could
deliver them accurately on a warhead.
Although North Korea is dotted with
underground military installations, media reports in South Korea have
identified North Hamkyong province on the North's northeast coast as a
likely site for a nuclear test. -- The
Associated Press
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