North Korea under fire at Asean security forum
Rogue state told to end nuclear programme; pressure on Beijing over South China Sea

North Korea came under fire at an Asia-Pacific security forum on Tuesday as foreign ministers called on the defiant communist state to end its nuclear weapons programme.
In a flurry of diplomatic activity, the gathering in Brunei also saw Beijing pressured over its South China Sea claims while the top US and Russian envoys met to discuss the thorny issues of Syria and US fugitive Edward Snowden.
Participants in the Asean Regional Forum, which include 26 countries across the Asia-Pacific and the European Union, sent a “very strong message” to North Korea, Seoul’s envoy said.
“Most ministers at the meeting expressed a very strong message to the North Korean delegation that they should denuclearise, they should refrain from provocative action,” South Korean Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se told reporters on the sidelines.

However, North Korean Foreign Minister Pak Ui-chun fired back in the discussions, calling the United States the “true provocateur” and saying it would retain its nuclear weapons programme until Washington drops its “hostile” stance.