S Korea asks N Korea to speed up denuclearization

ANI  |  Seoul [South Korea] 

on Monday asked to accelerate their denuclearisation process, while asking the to faithfully carry out its promises on the same.

Asked about a possible breakthrough in the denuclearisation talks between and the US, quoted Cheong Wa Dae (South Korean presidential office) saying, "We are asking to speed up its denuclearization process. And to the U.S., we are asking that it to show sincere efforts about corresponding measures that North Korea is demanding."

Last month, South Korean Moon Jae-in, who was on a state visit to urged collective efforts to accelerate North Korea's denuclearisation exercise.

"If North Korea comes up with a more detailed plan for its denuclearisation while and the U.S. swiftly take corresponding measures, the speed (of denuclearisation) will further increase," Moon said this at a special lecture in

On April 27, Moon and North Korean leader met at the inter-Korean summit at Panmunjom in the Demilitarised Zone (DMZ), which separates the two Koreas. The two leaders signed the Panmunjom Declaration, pledging for ceasing hostilities against each other and advocating complete denuclearisation in the

Asked about a possible meeting between Kim and Moon, said there were no discussions on the same as of now.

US Mike Pompeo, who visited North Korea for denuclearisation talks last month, had invited furore from Pyongyang, which later expressed its disappointment over the "gangster-like" attitude and demand of US officials on denuclearisation, calling it "regrettable and really disappointing."

In a statement by an unnamed foreign ministry spokesman, carried by North's Korean (KCNA), criticised for "seeking unilateral and forced and "gangster-like demand for denuclearisation", reported.

"The US just came out with such unilateral, robber-like denuclearisation demands as CVID (complete, verifiable and irreversible dismantlement), declaration and verification that go against the spirit of the North Korean-US summit meeting," the said.

Despite Kim vowing to give up developing nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles, a confidential report by the revealed that the country was reportedly continuing to pursue its nuclear weapons programme.

Last week, a also stated that North Korea was reportedly constructing new intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) and its missile programme was doing "business as usual.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, August 06 2018. 11:37 IST