产品展示
  • 17-2021款本田CRV皓影后备箱储物盒改装专用装饰配件汽车用品大全
  • wrc车门贴个性装饰车贴花拉力赛车身贴汽车个性贴纸划痕车贴门贴
  • 骑威龙8寸蓝牙车载重低音炮汽车音响12v24v220v家用插卡电脑音箱
  • 比亚迪f3F6速锐前门后门4寸6x96.5寸后备箱同轴喇叭音响套装改装
  • 汽车贴纸皮卡丘哆啦A梦汽车贴纸车门遮挡划痕嘻哈可爱痛车贴卡通
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

新闻中心

China told to stop tankers in its waters reaching N. Korea

2024-06-06 21:30:18      点击:671
North Korean Ambassador to the United Nations Kim Song leaves a Security Council meeting on Non-proliferation/North Korea,<strong></strong> July 13, at the United Nations headquarters. AP-Yonhap
North Korean Ambassador to the United Nations Kim Song leaves a Security Council meeting on Non-proliferation/North Korea, July 13, at the United Nations headquarters. AP-Yonhap

The Group of Seven nations, the European Union and three other countries are urging China to expel oil tankers from its waters that appear to be taking fuel to North Korea in defiance of U.N. sanctions, according to a letter seen by AFP, Friday.

"We have concerns regarding the continuing presence of multiple oil tankers... that use your territorial waters in Sansha Bay as refuge to facilitate their trade of sanctioned petroleum products to the DPRK," the letter said, using initials for the formal name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

Ambassadors from the G7 nations ― Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Britain and the United States ― signed the letter addressed to China's U.N. envoy Zhang Jun.

Also signing were envoys from the European Union, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand.

In the letter, the ambassadors told Zhang they "would like to provide your government with additional information and satellite imagery that clearly indicates these practices continued to occur within China's jurisdiction in 2022 and have continued in 2023."

"We reiterate our previous request that China inspect the vessels for evidence of illicit oil smuggling, deny them all services, and ultimately expel them from your waters as quickly as possible," it added.

A source said the letter had been sent to the Chinese envoy, though there was no confirmation it had been received.

Sansha Bay is in China's Fujian Province and connects to the East China Sea through a deep channel.

The letter noted that the presence and movement of the tankers was observed by the UN group of experts monitoring sanctions compliance by North Korea.

North Korea has been subject to U.N. sanctions since 2006 over its missile launches and nuclear programs.

Additional sanctions in 2017 limited its crude oil imports.

The Security Council has been unable to reach a united position since then, unlike earlier years.

In May 2022, China and Russia vetoed a resolution imposing new sanctions on Pyongyang, and no Council resolution or statement has been adopted since then despite several missile launches by North Korea.

On Friday, the North fired several cruise missiles into the Yellow (West) Sea, off the Korean Peninsula, South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff said.

The United States regularly accuses Beijing and Moscow of "shielding" the North Korean regime and encouraging further launches by preventing a united response from the Council.

"It is critical for the international community, including China, to send a strong and unified message that the DPRK must refrain from provocation, abide by its (U.N. Security Council) obligations... to achieve a complete, verifiable and irreversible denuclearization of the Korean peninsula," the letter said. (AFP)


Why N. Korea cannot launch spy satellite
Global Peace Foundation presents vision for unified Korea through campaign