North
Korea Disses SK Meddling As UN
Guterres Who Also Censors Press
Is In Lisbon
By
Matthew
Russell Lee,
CJR Letter
PFTracker
UN GATE, Jan 12 –
After Kim Jong Un complained
about the seizure of a
sanctions busting ship, he
also published a vanity press
book in Geneva, rather like UN
News channels whatever
propaganda UN Sec-Gen Antonio
Guterres puts out, see below.
Guterres has for days refused
to answer banned Inner City
Press' questions about North
Korea sanctions, here.
Now on
January 12, with Guterres on
yet another wasteful
junket in Lisbon, this from
the DPRK Mission to the UN:
"Kim Kye Gwan, advisor of the
DPRK Foreign Ministry, issued
the following statement on
Saturday: From the
outset of this year, the south
Korean authorities have become
too busy, talking about urgent
conveying of the U.S.
president's birthday greetings
to the Chairman of our State
Affairs Commission. This
is what the U.S. president
asked for to be surely
conveyed to the Chairman when
he met the person concerned of
Chongwadae in Washington, the
south Korean authorities said
in an extremely urgent notice
they sent. But they seem not
to know that there is a
special liaison channel
between the top leaders of the
DPRK and the U.S. The
birthday greetings from the
U.S. president that reached us
by care of the excited south
Korean authorities through the
notice is what we already got
through the personal letter of
the U.S. president.
South Korea, not a member of
the U.S. clan, went so
frivolous as to convey the
greetings from the U.S.
president. It seems it still
has lingering hope for playing
the role of "mediator" in the
DPRK-U.S. relations. To
forge personal relations
between heads of state is a
diplomatically natural thing
between states. However, it is
somehow presumptuous for south
Korea to meddle in the
personal relations between
Chairman of the State Affairs
Commission Kim Jong Un and
President Trump. As
acknowledged by the world, it
is true that the personal
relations between the Chairman
of our State Affairs
Commission and President Trump
are not bad. But, it is
absentminded to think of
either making us return to the
dialogue with the U.S. by
taking the advantage of such
relations or creating an
atmosphere for it. We
have been deceived by the
U.S., being caught in the
dialogue with it for over one
year and a half, and that was
the lost time for us.
Although Chairman Kim Jong Un
has a good personal feelings
about President Trump, they
are, in the true sense of the
word, "personal". The Chairman
of the State Affairs
Commission would not discuss
the state affairs on the basis
of such personal feelings, as
he represents our state and
its interests.
What is clear is that we will
never lose our time again,
being taken in by the U.S.
trick as in the past.
There will never be such
negotiations as that in
Vietnam, in which we proposed
exchanging a core nuclear
facility of the country for
the lift of some UN sanctions
in a bid to lessen the
sufferings of the peaceable
people even a bit. There
is no need for us to be
present in such talks, in
which there is only unilateral
pressure, and we have no
desire to barter something for
other thing at the talks like
traders. It can be said
that the reopening of dialogue
between the DPRK and the U.S.
may be possible only
under the condition of the
latter's absolute agreement on
the issues raised by the
former, but we know well that
the U.S. is neither ready nor
able to do so. We know
well about the way we should
go and will go on our
way. Under these
circumstances, the south
Korean authorities had better
not dream a fabulous dream
that we would return to
the dialogue with thankful
feelings for the birthday
greetings like someone. They
are well advised to behave
prudently not to be reduced to
a fool heading nowhere."
Inner City Press will continue
to cover this, including from
the UN gate while corrupt
Guterres clings to power, and
at the SDNY. Watch this site.
Inner City
Press was banned from entering
the UN to cover the December
11 UN Security Council meeting
about North Korea, so had to
tweet it from outside,
stakeouts it could not ask
questions at by Germany
and China,
and here
Melissa Fleming's MALU
which lets Xinhua in, keeps
Inner City Press out.
On December 24, a
US District Judge awarded more
than $500 million for the
killing of Otto Warmbier - a
default judgment on which
Inner City Press on Christmas
Eve said to expect the DPRK
response. On December 25
the response is to the
December 22 UN General
Assembly resolution: the DPRK
state-run Rodong newspaper
called the resolution a
"serious political provocation
against the DPRK and a vicious
move to tarnish its
international image. The
wicked intention of the US...
in getting vocal about the
non-existent 'human rights
issue' of the DPRK is to
broaden the scope of the
sanctions and pressure and
escalate them." The US tried
to get a Security
Council meeting on human
rights in North Korea but
stood down, reportedly
thinking it will get it with
the five incoming members.
We'll see and report on it,
even still banned from the UN
North Korea style by Dear
Leader Antonio Guterres,
covering up his own conflict
of interest. As to
Warmbier it's Case
1:18-cv-00977-BAH
and it
goes like this: "Upon
consideration of the
plaintiffs’ Motion for Default
Judgment and, If Necessary,
Motion for Evidentiary
Hearing, ECF No. 16, the
related legal memorandum in
support thereof, the exhibits
and declarations attached
thereto, the evidentiary
hearing conducted on December
19, 2018, and the entire
record herein, for the reasons
stated in the accompanying
Memorandum Opinion issued
contemporaneously with this
Order, the Court finds that
the plaintiffs have
established their “claim[s] or
right to relief by evidence
satisfactory to the court,” 28
U.S.C. §
1608(e), and it is hereby
ORDERED that the plaintiffs’
Motion for Default Judgment is
GRANTED; and it is
further
ORDERED that the defendant
Democratic People’s Republic
of Korea (“North Korea”)
shall be liable for damages in
the amount of $501,134,683.80,
which shall be allocated in
the
following manner:
The estate of Otto Warmbier is
entitled to the sum of
$21,134,683.80 in compensatory
damages and $150,000,000.00 in
punitive damages; and
Otto Warmbier’s parents
Frederick Warmbier and Cynthia
Warmbier are each entitled to
the
sum of $15,000,000 in
compensatory damages and
$150,000,000 in punitive
damages; and it
is further
ORDERED that the plaintiffs
shall, at their own cost and
consistent with the
requirements of 28 U.S.C. §
1608(e), send a copy of this
Order to the defendant North
Korea." On November 19, US
State Department spokesperson
Heather Nauert announced:
"Secretary Michael R. Pompeo
spoke today with Swedish
Foreign Minister Margot
Wallstrom and thanked her for
Sweden’s role in securing the
release of an American citizen
from North Korea. The
Secretary also thanked the
Swedes for their support and
services as our Protecting
Power in North Korea, and
discussed other issues of
mutual concern." On November 8
after Russia called a closed
door consultation on North
Korea, US Nikki Haley emerged
afterward and snarked that
Russia said this was about
humanitarian but what they
REALLY want is to lift banking
restriction and we're not
going to do that. (See
previous Inner City Press
scoop, before being roughed up
and banned by Antonio
Guterres, credited here.)
On November 16 this from US
State Department Spokesperson
Heather Nauert: "Secretary
Michael R. Pompeo met with ROK
Unification Minister Cho
Myoung-gyon on November 16,
2018 in Washington, D.C.
They affirmed their commitment
to close coordination during
ongoing efforts to achieve the
final, fully verified
denuclearization of the DPRK
as agreed to by Chairman
Kim. Both sides also
discussed ways to deepen
coordination so that
inter-Korean cooperation and
progress on U.S.-DPRK
negotiations toward
denuclearization remain
aligned." There are boasts of
the testing of a new high tech
"tactical" weapon...
Back on
August 3, the US Mission to
the UN, silent on UN
censorship to date, issued
this: "The U.S. Mission to the
United Nations submitted a
list of designation proposals
today to the UN Security
Council’s 1718 North Korea
Sanctions Committee as part of
the U.S. government’s regular
sanctions implementation
activities. This action
coincided with today’s
Treasury Department actions
and is part of a coordinated
U.S. government effort to
continue to implement existing
sanctions, both domestic and
multilateral, and cut off
North Korea’s illicit
financial activities. The
United States has been clear
that if the international
community wants to achieve the
final, fully verified
denuclearization of North
Korea, the best way to support
that process is to remain
vigilant in applying the
current sanctions to their
full extent." And now the
proposed names, with comments
(or not) solicited by 1718
chair van Oosterom until
August 10 at 3 pm: Ri
Jong Won & 3 entities:
Dandong Zhongsheng Industry
andTrade Company Limited,
Korea Ungum Corporation and
the Agrosoyuz Commercial Bank.
We'll have more on this. On July 3 the same rogue UN
Security officer Ronald E.
Dobbins and a partner roughed
up Inner City Press as it
covered Guterres' budget; on
July 5 and 6, Guterres UN has
banned Inner City Press five
days now and counting from
entering the UN pending a
"review" - of Dobbins'
brutality?
Fox News story
here,
GAP blogs I
and II.
Now
on August 2 on their way to
Malaysia a US State Department
Official travel with Mike
Pompeo answered questions
about North Korea, including:
" If he does meet with the
North Korea foreign minister,
would that be on Friday or
Saturday, do you think?
SENIOR STATE DEPARTMENT
OFFICIAL: Thank you for
that question, Carol.
I’m not in a position to
confirm any additional
meetings of a bilateral nature
beyond those meetings with
Singapore, but I will simply
note what happens at these
annual gatherings is there are
at least 27 – I think this
year with guests of the chair
there are approximately 30 –
foreign ministers. That
provides a platform for a lot
of interaction – some sit-down
meetings, some side-bar
meetings, some pull-asides,
some chance encounters – to
address challenges in the
region or other
business. So I think
it’s safe to say the Secretary
will be seeing many of his
counterparts.
MODERATOR: We need to
wrap it up. A few more
questions.
QUESTION: You said last
Tuesday that the Secretary
will ask countries to continue
implementing sanctions against
North Korea, but what – can he
do more than just ask
implementing when there is a
sense that they are not
implementing them as – as they
were doing before the summit
and before this year?
SENIOR STATE DEPARTMENT
OFFICIAL: Yeah, I think
when it comes to North Korea
and sanctions, it’s more than
an ask; it’s a reminder of
obligations. All of the
countries participating in
these multilateral meetings
are also members of the United
Nations and are obligated to
implement all UN Security
Council resolutions. And
we do have concerns about
North Korea bypassing some of
those sanctions, not adhering
to its own obligations, so the
Secretary will use these
opportunities to remind all of
that obligation to stick to
the sanctions as a means to
get to the ultimate objective,
the fully verified, finally
fully verified,
denuclearization of North
Korea.
QUESTION: But he already
addressed this problem at the
UN Security Council a few
weeks ago. What can he
do more than just reminding
them? I mean, is this
having some success in
implementation? Do you
see some changes or not yet?
SENIOR STATE DEPARTMENT
OFFICIAL: Well, in very
general terms, we believe that
the sanctions and the
adherence to sanctions by
countries around the world is
a primary reason that North
Korea has entered into
dialogue, and those sanctions
need to stay in place until
the goals and objectives of
the sanctions are
achieved. That’s a very
important message, and it’s
not one that the Secretary
delivers lightly, I think he
delivers on a regular basis,
and we see a need to continue
doing so." We'll have more on
this - and, we hope, on the
question we were able to ask
the Dutch chair of the UN's
North Korea sanctions
committee Karel Von Oosterom,
who has been informed in
person at the Delegates'
Entrance gate and then in
writing: would travel ban
waivers be needed if North
Korea attends the UN's
September high level week? The
answer, from genial Dutch
spokesman Frits Kemperman who
knows of the UN's ouster of
Inner City Press, was that Kim
Jong Un is not on the travel
ban list. But how about the
rest of his possible
delegation? How will we get
this answer, while
banned? On June 28,
restricted Inner City Press
observed China's Permanent
Representative and one staffer
rushing, or trying to rush, in
to the Security Council
between 5:45 and 6 pm. But the
door was locked. Exclusive
Inner City Press Periscope
video here.
Later it was reported and
China and Russia had a
proposal to reduce UN
sanctions on North Korea.
We'll have more on this. On
June 13 Inner City Press asked
this month's President of the
UN Security Council Vassily
Nebenzia if his country,
Russia, thinks the Singapore
deal is essentially "freeze
for freeze." Nebenzia replied,
"There are elements of freeze
for freeze, that is clear."
Video here.
Inner City Press also asked
the chair of the UN Security
Council's 1718 Committee if
the blanket sanctions
exemptions were time bound and
are now over. Seems so -
Periscope video here, at end.
On June 12 Trump said the war
games will not be resumed in
North Korea complies, calling
them provocative and
expensive. A Japanese reporter
asked about abductions,
adding, when will Trump do
interview with Japanese TV?
Trump said abductions will be
worked on, it's not in the
document. Trump said that to
verify - the word not in the
document - there'll be a lot
of people there. There was no
mention of the UN or IAEA.
Hours later UN Secretary
General Antonio Guterres put
out a canned statement "reiterat[ing]
his readiness
to fully
support the
ongoing
process,"
below, after leaving problems
at the IAEA unaddressed,
taking few and only handpicked
questions, restricting the
Press.
***
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