For
US - North Korea Talks Inner
City Press Is Told No
Sanctions Exemption Requests
to UN Yet
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS,
May 18 – On the North Korea -
US talks, US President Donald
Trump on May 10 tweeted
"The highly anticipated
meeting between Kim Jong Un
and myself will take place in
Singapore on June 12th." The
odds now change daily, and the
UN remains marginal at best.
On May 18, Inner City Press
asked the Chair of the UN
Security Council's 1718 DPRK
(North Korea) sanctions
committee Karel van Oosterom
if his Committee has received
ay request for sanctions
exemptions or waivers for the
June 12 talks; he indicated
No: "the members of the
Committee have not received
such a request." Vine video here.
This was in a loud press
gaggle after the Committee met
with the UK's Ambassador to
Pyongyang, after a similar
meeting with Russia's
ambassador there. (The UN is
using a little known Russian
correspondent bank, which self
reportedly had the wrong
people negotiate the
arrangement, as Inner City
Press exclusively reported).
Those covering the meeting
nearly entirely worked for
Japanese media, see below.
Inner City Press previously
asked UN Secretary General
Antonio Guterres' spokesman
Stephane Dujarric if it would
play any role - no answer -
and on May 9 asked him if the
UN had played any role at all
in the release of the three
American hostages by North
Korea earlier in the day. No,
Dujarric said, before laughing
after a Press question about
hindered humanitarian aid and
calling Inner City Press
"self-centered." Video here.
On May 16, North Korea's first
vice minister for foreign
affairs Kim Kye Gwan issued a
statement further calling the
talks into question. Guterres,
holding a press encounter in
Brussels as he rarely does in
New York, said he hopes common
sense prevails. Inner City
Press asked his deputy
spokesman Farhan Haq, video here, UN transcript here:
Inner City Press: does
he believe, it seems like the
snags are based on a couple of
things, one having to do with
this Max Thunder military
exercise, and that's the basis
on which North Korea said the
DPRK [Democratic People’s
Republic of Korea] cancelled
the meeting with South Korea
and more recently they focused
on some comments by the new
[United States] National
Security Advisor analogizing
North Korea to Libya.
So, I'm just wondering,
particularly as to the
military exercises, does he
think this is the right
time? Does he think
there should be some meeting
halfway or is he just hoping
that it works out?
Deputy Spokesman: We
believe that the parties
involved know what their
concerns are. And, like
the Secretary-General said, he
believes that common sense
will prevail. He does
regret that the inter-Korean
meeting was cancelled, but he
hopes the discussion will
resume." The UN under Guterres
is becoming ever more
marginal. On May 15,
Kim's state media KCNA cited
the joint US - South Korea
military exercised somewhat
absurdly called Max Thunder as
an “exercise targeting us,
which is being carried out
across South Korea, is a
flagrant challenge to the
Panmunjom Declaration and an
intentional military
provocation running counter to
the positive political
development on the Korean
Peninsula.The United States
will also have to undertake
careful deliberations about
the fate of the planned North
Korea-U.S. summit in light of
this provocative military
ruckus jointly conducted with
the South Korean authorities.”
At the UN Security Council
stakeout on the afternoon of
May 15, Sweden's Permanent
Representative Olof B. Skoog
said had yet to hear of this
development; the Dutch chair
of the Council's North Korea
1718 sanctions committee went
into the Council's meetings,
on Somalia and Abyei, without
stopping to spek with the
press. Back on May 12, KCNA
announced that North Korea's
"Nuclear Weapon Institute and
other concerned institutions
are taking technical measures
for dismantling the northern
nuclear test ground ... in
order to ensure transparency
of discontinuance of the
nuclear test." Media from five
countries - including the UK
but not Japan - were invited.
Japan's right wing Sankei
Shimbun, which routinely
misses North Korea news at the
UN in favor of fluff about
Kanye West and its reporter
Mayu Uetsuka's laundry and
jogging in the park, snarked
that "The
dismantling of
the nuclear
test site may
just be
another
theatrical
performance to
the outside
world... It
seems that North Korea wants
foreign currency under the
premise of inviting foreign
media." But now an expert opines
that "only four media (two US
TV, one ROK TV, one ROK text)
100% confirmed going to North
Korea to observe demolition of
Pyungye-ri. Many media invited
have had invites rescinded
with no real reason given." So
does Sankei stand by its
statement this is all about
getting foreign currency?
Trump back on May 8 while
withdrawing from the Iran Deal
announced that Mike Pompeo was
on his way to North Korea and
would be there in an hour's
time. Trump said he was
hopeful the US hostages would
be released and that
withdrawal from the Iran Deal
would make America safer.
Meanwhile Kim Jong Un has
flown to the Chinese city of
Dalian and met Xi Jiping.
Along with a seaside walk, the
talk was of synchronized and
mutual steps with the US,
probably not what Trump wants
to hear. South Korea's Yonhap
and Chosun have both reported
the talks will take place in
Singapore in the June, most
probably the third week in
June. It is noted that Trump
often reverses course - it
could be earlier, in the DMZ
in Panmunjom, or even not at
all, depending on how the
meeting is pre-spun. Either
way, it seems the UN remains
on the sidelines, despite
intermittent claims of
relevance from UN Secretary
General Antonio Guterres and
his yet to be seen new head of
the Department of Political
Affairs. Inner City Press,
which previously shared a UN office
with Chosun Ilbo prior to
being evicted
for exposing the UN's bribery
by Ng Lap Seng and now Patrick
Ho, was told she'd start on
May 1. Also as the Trump - Kim
talks approach, the
constellation of those
opposing or seeking to
undercut them extends from
self-styled diplomatic experts
in Washington to decadent and
ill-informed pro-Abe Japanese
scribes in New York. The
former include politicians who
while first claiming diplomacy
was being killed now say it it
moving too fast. The latter
published, in Sankei Shimbun
alone, two separate stories
about the May 3 event at the
UN in which as Inner City
Press reported
amid other news a professor
from Tufts University said
Japan's colonial rule of Korea
was better than that of the
Kims. Of this, Sankei's Mayu
Uetsuka who was not even there
wrote that “Mr. Kaichiro
Iizuka (41), the eldest son of
Mr. Yaeko Taguchi (62) = Same
(22) =, said the mother was
one year old when she was
kidnapped, "I have no memory
of touching my mother ". While
attention is being paid to
nuclear and missile issues, he
said, 'Do not forget the
abduction issue that human
beings are being threatened,
human lives should not be
lighter than nuclear weapons
and missiles.'” Meanwhile the
same Uetsuka, unconcerned with
human lives other than her
own, bragged
about renting an apartment on
the Upper West Side there is
no washing machine in the
room. At first I was looking
for a property with "washing
machine" at the rental site,
but I could not find it in the
desired area in the budget.
New York has many old
buildings, so there are no
washing machines only about
30% of the property. Piping
around the water is not in
place, it is also difficult to
purchase and install a washing
machine yourself. There is a
laundry room in the building
and it will be shared with
neighbors. From friends, I
heard that there are some
Americans who are washing
shoes and they snatch, but
they will have to get used to
it. In the life of the United
States, insensitive dullness
which does not care a little
is trained. The room I live in
is also puzzled by the
appearance of the next
apartment from the window, but
it gradually ceased to matter.
Let's start a jog at Central
Park for a diet.” No, it's
time to be replaced, putting
out for old reports, throwing
away real information for a
self-promoting bartender
typist, on May 15 typing slews
of quotes about Guinea Bissau
and Gaza seemingly not to be
used: Kevin Pinner, claiming
he “named products, generated
slogans and ideas for
marketing campaigns” for
Chinavision. Oh
for the days
of Jun
Kurosawa, who
at least
pursued the
attempted
censorship of
Mr Tatsuya
Kato. These
days Pinner sits elsewhere in
the bullpen, ordered to type
information that Sankei will
never publish; Mayu Uetsuka
most recently tried to promote
New York ads for Hitachi,
Panasonic, Shimizu
Corporation, and Daikin
Industries. She was not
present on May 17; no question
about Sankei's dubious story
about South Korean ship to
ship transfers with DPRK ships
was asked. Tellingly, even
after sitting on the ground at
the stakeout, Sankei's Gaza
articles were by Mina Mina (or
Mina Mitsui), Takao Sato in
Jerusalem and in DC, Hiroyuki
Kano still running interviews
which while interesting are
from April: more than two
months ago. We will have more
on this.
***
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