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North Korea
AsiaEast Asia

North Korea attacks Japan’s ‘wicked character’, rejects Shinzo Abe’s offer to meet Kim Jong-un without preconditions

  • North Korea also condemned ‘weasel-faced’ Japanese foreign minister over ‘hare-brained and loathsome words’
  • Attempts to normalise relations between Japan and North Korea have often been waylaid by the issue of abducted Japanese

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North Korean leader Kim Jong-un. Photo: AP
Park Chan-kyong
North Korea has dismissed Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s bid to hold a summit with leader Kim Jong-un without preconditions, urging Japan to first abandon its “hostile policy” towards Pyongyang.
Abe had previously insisted normalisation of ties depended on progress being made on the return of Japanese nationals abducted by North Korean agents in the 1970s and 1980s. His indication last month that he would be willing to hold a summit with Kim without preconditions therefore signalled a shift in Japanese government policy.

Pyongyang’s response, however, was scathing.

“The Abe group is talking about the ‘opening of summit talks without precondition’ while desperately hurting the DPRK, which is the height of brazen-facedness,” a spokesperson for the country’s Korea Asia-Pacific Peace Committee – which is in charge of setting up diplomatic policies and exchanges – said on Monday, according to North Korean state media.

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The spokesman also heaped insults upon Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono, who last month said loopholes in sanctions – pertaining to ship-to-ship transfers of goods, remittances from North Korean workers abroad and stolen cryptocurrency – needed to be closed to compel Kim to make the “right decision”.

“It is useless to cry out for the improvement of relations unless Japan gives up its wicked character,” the North Korean spokesperson said. “Even though there is no able man in Japan, it is pitiful that such a poor-grade being as weasel-faced Kono who always makes hare-brained and loathsome words serves as foreign minister.

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Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono. Photo: Kyodo
Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono. Photo: Kyodo

“Abe tenaciously knocks the door of Pyongyang while making an advertisement as if the Japanese government’s policy for negotiation with the DPRK was changed but there is nothing changed in its hostile policy towards the DPRK,” the spokesperson said, adding that Kono had called for the tightening of sanctions on the North “at his master’s beck and call”.

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