By AP | May 04, 2017, 11.11 AM IST
SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA: North Korea has issued a rare direct
criticism of China through a commentary saying its "reckless remarks'' on
the North's nuclear program are testing its patience and could trigger
unspecified "grave'' consequences.
China, North Korea's largest trading partner and
main benefactor, suspended imports of North Korean coal in line with U.N.
sanctions and has been urging its traditional ally to stop nuclear and missile
activities amid U.S. pressure to use its leverage to resolve the nuclear
standoff.
The commentary released Wednesday by the
state-run Korean Central News Agency said that "a string of absurd and
reckless remarks are now heard from China everyday only to render the present
bad situation tenser.''
The article cited commentaries by Chinese state media that it
said shifted the blame for deteriorating bilateral relations onto the North and
raised "lame excuses for the base acts of dancing to the tune of the
U.S.''
"China should no longer try to test the
limits of the DPRK's patience,'' the North Korean commentary said, using its
official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. "China had
better ponder over the grave consequences to be entailed by its reckless act of chopping down the pillar of the DPRK-China
relations.''
The article was not attributed to any government
agency or official; the writer was identified only as Kim Chol. Still, it's
unusual for the North to directly criticize China. Previously it has couched
such criticism by referring to China only as "a neighboring country.''
Chinese state media, meanwhile, have recently unleashed
regular and harsh criticisms over the North's actions.
The Global Times, an outspoken nationalist tabloid
published by the ruling Communist Party's flagship People's Daily, warned in a
Thursday editorial that the North's actions threatened a 1961 treaty of
non-aggression between the two countries. It called on the regime to end its
nuclear tests.
"China will not allow its northeastern
region to be contaminated by North Korea's nuclear activities,'' the Global
Times declared.
In recent days, the paper also warned that China
was able to strike back "at any side that crosses the red line'' and would
impose an oil embargo against the North in response to any more tests. The
North Korean commentary said it's China that crossed "the red line.''
The People's Daily declared Sunday -- and again
on Tuesday -- that the North's nuclear ambitions "put itself and the whole
region into dire peril.''
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