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A file picture of China’s ambassador to the US, Cui Tiankai. He says it is wrong for the US to expect China to take the lead in reining in North Korea. Photo: Alamy

China rejects US demand to cut oil exports to North Korea

China’s ambassador to Washington says America needs to come to the negotiating table to help end the crisis over Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons programme

China rebuffed US demands to cut off oil exports to North Korea as a way to dissuade Kim Jong-un’s regime from pursuing nuclear weapons, saying instead it was American leaders who needed to tone down their rhetoric and come to the negotiating table.

China will implement all United Nations Security Council resolutions, “no more, no less”, Cui Tiankai, China’s ambassador to the US, told reporters at a briefing in Washington when asked if Beijing would cut oil shipments.

Any further steps would need to be worked out with the agreement of the entire UN Security Council, he said.

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson demanded on Thursday that China use its role as the main exporter of oil to North Korea to force Kim to abandon his nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programmes.

Hours earlier, North Korea launched a missile over Japan, the latest in a series of actions that have rattled the international community and prompted a new round of US-led sanctions.

Cui said Washington, not Beijing, needed to take more responsibility for the issue.

“They cannot just leave the issue to China alone and honestly I think the United States should be doing more, much more than now, so that there is real effective international cooperation on this issue,” Cui said.

Asked what specifically the US should do, Cui said: “They should refrain from issuing more threats” and “do more to find an effective way to resume dialogue and negotiation”.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: US call for N Korea oil ban rejected by China
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