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Countries must unite on N.Korea sanctions - experts

(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-11-21 10:41

WASHINGTON - UN sanctions can only have a chance at persuading North Korea to rethink its nuclear weapons program if all countries join in strongly supporting and implementing the penalties, former US government experts said on Monday.


Envoys involved in six-party talks on dismantling North Korea's nuclear program, chief US delegate Christopher Hill (C), South Korean counterpart Chung Yung-Woo (R) and Japanese negotiator Kenichiro Sasae (L) in Hanoi. Hill arrived in Beijing for meetings with China aimed at jump-starting stalled six-nation talks on the crisis. [AFP]

Richard Newcomb, who for 18 years ran the US Treasury Department office that designs and implements sanctions, said a UN resolution adopted on Oct 14 sets out "strongly targeted ... (and) clearly articulated" financial and weapons penalties.

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Imposed after Pyongyang conducted its first nuclear weapons test, the US-drafted resolution allows nations to stop cargo going to and from North Korea to check for weapons of mass destruction or related supplies.

These are "better crafted and with greater specificity" than sanctions imposed previously on other countries and could work, Newcomb told a Korea Economic Institute program.
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