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(LEAD) N. Korea raps Japan over stalled nuclear talks
By Kim Hyun SEOUL, April 28 (Yonhap) -- North Korea blasted Japan on Tuesday for passing the blame over stalled nuclear disarmament talks, insisting Tokyo is responsible for the deadlock by not fulfilling its obligations.
The criticism came in response to Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Takeo Kawamura, who a day earlier denounced Pyongyang's reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel rods as "not constructive" and urged the country to return to the six-party talks.
"Kawamura's absurd speech, the same as a dog's barking in the moonlight, is not even worth discussing," North Korea's Cabinet newspaper Minju Joson said in a commentary.
"The Japanese reactionary forces... are pointing their finger at us and seriously provoking the Korean military and the people," the paper said, warning, "This is not empty talk."
"But now that he is taking issue with the Sept. 19 joint statement and passing the responsibility for wrecking the six-party talks to us, we must bring up the matter," it said. The joint statement refers to a landmark agreement the two Koreas, the United States, China, Japan and Russia reached in 2005 to resolve the dispute over North Korea's nuclear weapons program.
The nuclear talks have been in limbo since late last year due to disputes over how to verify Pyongyang's past nuclear activity. Tension spiked markedly after North Korea's rocket launch on April 5, which led to a series of punitive reactions from the international community.
The U.N. Security Council adopted a presidential statement condemning the launch, prompting Pyongyang to withdraw from the six-party talks in protest. Last week, the Security Council's sanctions committee froze foreign assets of three North Korean firms suspected of aiding the country's nuclear and missile programs. In response Pyongyang swiftly announced it has begun reprocessing spent nuclear fuel rods to extract plutonium, used to make nuclear bombs.
Kawamura said in a press conference that Japan will fulfill U.N. sanctions and closely work with the U.S. to push the nuclear talks forward.
North Korea accused the Japanese government of politicizing its rocket launch to fend off internal criticism. Japan also failed to provide its share of energy aid promised to Pyongyang under a six-party deal and tried to link an "irrelevant" abduction issue to the nuclear negotiations, the newspaper said.
Under a 2007 deal, Pyongyang was promised 1 million tons of energy aid from the five other nations, and about three quarters of it has been delivered so far. Japan refuses to provide its share of the energy until North Korea's past abduction of its citizens are accounted for.
North Korea's party newspaper, the Rodong Sinmun, also lashed out at South Korea's foreign minister over his stern messages aimed at Pyongyang. The paper accused Yu Myung-hwan of trying to "maliciously harm his brethren, riding on the back of foreign forces," by pushing for Seoul's participation in a U.S.-led security campaign, the Proliferation Security Initiative, and interfering with inter-Korean issues.
hkim@yna.co.kr (END)
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