Jakarta Globe – AFP, Aug 14, 2014
Jakarta. North Korea has come up with a “concrete proposal” that could reduce tensions in the region, Indonesia’s foreign minister said Wednesday after talks with his counterpart from the North.
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| Indonesia’s Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa, right, greets his North Korean counterpart Ri Su-yong during their meeting in Jakarta on August 13, 2014. (AFP Photo/Bay Ismoyo) |
Jakarta. North Korea has come up with a “concrete proposal” that could reduce tensions in the region, Indonesia’s foreign minister said Wednesday after talks with his counterpart from the North.
“During the
discussion, I received one very specific, concrete proposal from the [North
Korean] side for us to communicate to the other side,” Marty Natalegawa told
reporters.
He refused
to elaborate but added: “I think it will be very useful to explore to try to
create a new momentum to reduce the tensions in the area.”
Marty would
not say what he meant by “the other side”, but later made reference to the
long-stalled six-party talks with nuclear-armed North Korea.
The process
involves the two Koreas, China, the United States, Japan and Russia. The talks,
which offer the North diplomatic, security and economic concessions in return
for nuclear disarmament, were last held in December 2008.
The North
announced the following April it was quitting the forum and resuming its
nuclear enrichment program.
Marty
suggested that the proposal put forward by Ri Su-yong, who took up the role of
North Korean foreign minister in April, involved issues that “have been
preoccupying all of us”.
“The issue
of nuclear proliferation, the issue of ballistic missile launches, the issue of
military exercises,” he said.
“The
proposal is a very good one, it’s a very constructive one.”
He did not
say when the proposal might be presented to the “other side”.
Relations
between North and South Korea have been tense in recent months, with Pyongyang
angered by Seoul’s annual joint military exercises with the United States.
Pyongyang
has been playing hawk and dove recently, carrying out an extended series of
missile tests since late June while making occasional peace overtures.
Indonesia
has generally had strong ties with the North since the 1960s, when the
country’s two founding fathers, Indonesia’s Sukarno and North Korea’s Kim
Il-sung, developed a good relationship.
Marty last
year paid a visit to the North.
Jakarta has
often played a mediating role in international disputes, and has based its
foreign policy on the principle of having a “million friends and zero enemies”.
Agence France-Presse
The North's
supreme leader Kim Jong-un inspects a
construction site at Kim Chaek University
of Technology,
Aug. 13. (File photo/Xinhua)
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