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China

China’s Envoy to the U.S. Says Reports of a Spike in Trade With North Korea Give a ‘Distorted’ Picture

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Reuters
Reuters
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Reuters
Reuters
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July 12, 2017, 12:29 AM ET
CHINA-NKOREA-US-MISSILE-DIPLOMACY-TRADE
A tourist looks out from the Broken Bridge next to the Friendship bridge (L) on the Yalu River connecting the North Korean town of Sinuiju and the Chinese border city of Dandong on July 6, 2017. Trucks still line up bumper-to-bumper on the "Sino-Korean Friendship Bridge" to bring goods from North Korea into China even as Beijing faces massive pressure to strangle its Communist ally economically. Some two dozen trucks awaited clearance to enter the border city of Dandong, through which 70 percent of North Korea's trade passes, a day after Pyongyang successfully tested an intercontinental ballistic missile. / AFP PHOTO / NICOLAS ASFOURI / TO GO WITH CHINA-NKOREA-US-MISSILE-DIPLOMACY-TRADE FOCUS BY JOANNA CHIU (Photo credit should read NICOLAS ASFOURI/AFP/Getty Images)Nicolas Asfouri—AFP/Getty Images

China‘s ambassador to the United States has said reports of trade growth between his country and North Korea, in spite of international efforts to press Pyongyang to give up its nuclear and missile programs, give “a distorted picture.”

Last week U.S. President Donald Trump denounced China‘s trade with North Korea, saying it had grown almost 40% in the first quarter, and cast doubt on whether Beijing was helping to counter the threat from North Korea.

Data released in April showed China‘s trade with North Korea grew 37.4% year on year in the first quarter, in spite of a ban on coal imports China announced in February.

“This is a distorted picture,” China‘s ambassador to the United States, Cui Tiankai, said in a speech to a Washington think tank on Monday.

Cui said bilateral trade declined in 2015 and 2016, and by 41% in April and 32% in May as a result of the coal import ban.

At the same time, Cui stressed that U.N. Security Council sanctions on North Korea did not constitute an embargo. “Normal trade … is not banned by these sanctions,” he said.

The Chinese embassy released a copy of Cui’s speech, originally delivered in an off-the-record setting, on Tuesday.

Cui said China backed further U.N. Action against North Korea for violations of U.N. Resolutions such as nuclear tests and launches of intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs).

He did not though make clear whether China believed North Korea‘s latest missile test last week, which the United States described as a first ICBM test, was of that type of missile.

For more on North Korea, watch Coins2Day’s video:

Diplomats say the United States is aiming for a vote within weeks to strengthen U.N. Sanctions on North Korea over the test, but Russia has objected to a Security Council condemnation of the launch as a U.S.-drafted statement labeled it an ICBM.

Cui said sanctions were necessary, but could not solve the North Korea n problem alone. He repeated a call for Washington to back a Chinese “suspension for suspension” proposal under which North Korea would freeze weapons testing in return for suspension of U.S.-South Korea n military exercises.

Washington says the exercises are needed to maintain defences against North Korea and U.S. Officials say Beijing could face U.S. Economic and trade pressure unless it does more to rein in North Korea.

Washington is expected to press the issue when senior U.S. And Chinese officials meet on July 19 to discuss bilateral economic issues.

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