UN slaps new sanctions on N Korea

epa06391774 United States Secretary of State Rex Tillerson (R) speaks during a United Nations Security Council meeting about the international response to North Korea's nuclear weapons program at United Nations headquarters in New York, New York, USA, 15 December 2017.  EPA-EFE/JUSTIN LANE


Bloomberg

The United Nations Security Council unanimously approved new sanctions targeting North Korea’s economy following the launch of
a ballistic missile last month
that Kim Jong Un’s regime said shows it can now target the entire continental US.
A week after US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson called out Russia and China for their support of Kim Jong Un’s regime, the 15-member Security Council passed its fourth resolution against Pyongyang in 13 months. The new restrictions are meant to slash North Korea’s imports of refined petroleum products, further restrict shipping and impose a 24-month deadline for expatriate North Korean workers to be sent home, up from a 12-month deadline in earlier drafts of the resolution.
“We believe maximum pressure today is the best antidote to the risk of war,” Francois Delattre, France’s ambassador to the UN, told reporters on his way in to the Security Council chambers. “The case of North Korea is getting more serious with each passing day.”
The new resolution cuts deliveries of petroleum products including diesel and kerosene by almost 90 percent, to the equivalent of 500,000 barrels per year starting Jan. 1. In September, the council demanded imports to be cut to the equivalent of 2 million barrels from 4.5 million barrels. The new resolution would also cap crude imports at current levels of about 4 million barrels annually.

REPEATED DEFIANCE
To try to reduce smuggling and ship-to-ship transfers of North Korean coal and other banned goods, the measure says countries can “seize, inspect, freeze (impound) any vessel in their ports” if there are grounds to believe the vessel was used to transport banned items. The measure also prohibits insurance for all North Korean-affiliated vessels, but it stopped short of authorizing foreign fleets to board susp-ect vessels without their owners’ permission in international waters.
The resolution’s passage is a political victory for the Trump administration, which has spent much of 2017 urging other nations to ratchet up the pressure on North Korea.
While much of that work has focused on China — North Korea’s top trading partner — the administration has sought to close off all foreign sources of income for Kim’s regime.
Tillerson and US Ambassador Nikki Haley have praised nations such as Mexico and Peru for expelling North Korean envoys, as
well as allies like Kuwait for agreeing to cut back on their use of North Korean workers.
China called for “all sides” to implement the UN resolutions “in a comprehensive and balanced
manner.” Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said China hoped “all parties will work with China to promote the denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula,”
Xinhua news agency reported.
Trump praised the Security Council’s decision on Twitter, saying
“The World wants Peace, not Death!” State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said in a separate tweet that “Secretary Tillerson and Ambassador @nikkihaley agree: our pressure camp-
aign against #NorthKorea must, and will, continue until denuclearisation is achieved.”
North Korea has repeatedly defied Security Council resolutions to halt its nuclear weapons and missile testing. The UN’s top envoy to North Korea, Jeffrey Feltman, said this month that he was “deeply worried” about the prospects of a diplomatic solution to the crisis after meeting officials in Pyongyang.
Haley said after vote that more could be done to isolate Kim’s regime. “Should the North Korean regime conduct another nuclear or ballistic missile test, this resolution commits the Security Council to take even further action,” Haley said.
“It sends the unambiguous message to Pyongyang that further defiance will invite further punishment and isolation.”
The governments of South Korea and Japan both issued statements on Saturday welcoming the tighter sanctions.

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