Lock流 Posted December 16, 2018 Posted December 16, 2018 North Korea has denounced the latest US sanctions, saying they could "block the path to denuclearisation on the Korean peninsula forever". Washington said it put the sanctions on three top officials, after a report threw up a raft of human rights abuses. A historic summit between the nations' leaders this summer appeared to point the path towards better relations. The period since then has seen North Korea engage both in angry exchanges and actions that have reduced tension. North Korea crisis in 300 words There have been suggestions of a second leaders' summit. Although President Donald Trump has indicated he is open to the idea he said this week that he was in no hurry. What has North Korea said? In a statement, the North Korean administration expressed "shock and indignation" at the new US sanctions. The statement carried by the North Korean news agency KCNA accused the US state department of being "bent on bringing... relations back to the status of last year which was marked by exchanges of fire". In the verbal exchanges last year, President Donald Trump called North Korean leader Kim Jong-un a "little rocket man" whose threats would be "met with fire and fury like the world has never seen". Among the North's many rebukes, it called Mr Trump an "old lunatic". The latest North Korean statement said the US policy of "maximum pressure" would be its "greatest miscalculation" and that it should instead return to the confidence building that was hoped for following the leaders' summit in Singapore. What are the new sanctions? They followed a state department report on the North that is regularly required by Congress. The US vowed to seize the US assets of Mr Kim's right-hand man, Choe Ryong-hae, and two others, security minister Jong Kyong-thaek and propaganda official Pak Kwang-ho. State department spokesman Robert Palladino said: "Human rights abuses in North Korea remain among the worst in the world and include extrajudicial killings, forced labour, torture, prolonged arbitrary detention, rape, forced abortions and other sexual violence." What has happened since Singapore? At the June summit, the two leaders signed an agreement to work towards the denuclearisation of the peninsula. But it did not include a timeline, details or any mechanisms to verify the process.
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