产品展示
  • 长安cs75plus水杯垫p装饰改装2022款22车内饰品内饰汽车用品配件
  • 汽车音响中音喇叭中置外置家用环绕前后双喇叭2.5寸中音喇叭改装
  • 适配五菱荣光6407 6450小卡货车单双排 宏光S1 S V前后刹车片汽车
  • 适用于荣威RX5 ERX5仪表中控台 仪表台空调出风口 冷暖风出风口
  • 大众新老款朗逸朗行朗境宝来空调蒸发箱电机内外循环私服电机原厂
联系方式

邮箱:[email protected]

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

产品中心

UN grants sanctions exemption for inter

2024-10-14 04:27:23      点击:204
In this <strong></strong>photo provided by South Korea's Defense Ministry on Thursday, a South Korean soldier, right, and North Korean soldier, left, shake hands as they meet to open a road connecting the two sides across the demilitarized zone in a project to excavate Korean War remains near the military demarcation line inside the Demilitarized Zone in Cheorwon, South Korea. Courtesy of South Korea's Defense Ministry
In this photo provided by South Korea's Defense Ministry on Thursday, a South Korean soldier, right, and North Korean soldier, left, shake hands as they meet to open a road connecting the two sides across the demilitarized zone in a project to excavate Korean War remains near the military demarcation line inside the Demilitarized Zone in Cheorwon, South Korea. Courtesy of South Korea's Defense Ministry

The United Nations Security Council on Friday granted a sanctions exemption to enable the two Koreas to conduct a survey on reconnecting railways across their border, a diplomatic source said.

The exemption was approved by consensus by the council's North Korea sanctions committee, paving the way for the survey and a groundbreaking ceremony before the end of the year.

South Korea requested an exemption for deliveries of fuel and other material needed to conduct the survey in the North. Pyongyang is under heavy U.N. sanctions, including capped imports of refined petroleum, for its nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs.

As part of efforts to denuclearize the regime, South Korea has pushed for inter-Korean projects, including the railway reconnection.

Last month the Koreas agreed to start the survey by late October and hold the groundbreaking ceremony between late November and early December, but the sanctions issue caused a delay.

"Our government has stood by the principle of honoring the sanctions regime and working closely with the international community as we conduct key inter-Korean projects," an official of South Korea's foreign ministry said on condition of anonymity. "Our government's consultations with the committee regarding the inter-Korean railway survey have now wrapped up."

Following consultations with U.S. officials this week, South Korea's top nuclear envoy, Lee Do-hoon, said Washington had expressed its "strong support" for the survey pending "technical" issues that still had to be resolved.

In response to the U.N. decision, a State Department spokesperson said, "The United States and our ally the Republic of Korea are committed to close coordination on our unified response to North Korea.

"The United States and its allies are committed to the same goal -- the final, fully verified denuclearization of North Korea, as agreed to by Chairman Kim Jong-un," the spokesperson added in an email to Yonhap. "Our focus right now is to make these negotiations successful."

Kim committed to work toward "complete" denuclearization when he met U.S. President Donald Trump for a historic summit in Singapore in June.

The U.S. has insisted that sanctions on North Korea remain fully in force until the full and verified denuclearization of the regime. Its approval of the exemption could help reopen stalled negotiations between Washington and Pyongyang.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and a senior North Korean official, Kim Yong-chol, were scheduled to hold talks in New York earlier this month, but the plan was called off a day before due to what the U.S. called scheduling issues.

Trump has said he still expects to hold a second summit with Kim early next year.

The U.N. decision is the first sanctions exemption related to the recent expansion of inter-Korean projects.

But it is limited to the survey, and the reconnection of the railway will be subject to additional exemptions. (Yonhap)

[INTERVIEW] 'North Korean women have no one to turn to in domestic violence'
North Korea leader asks to protect forest in border region