Published on Wed, Jun 13, 2012
Source : Reuters
BEIJING (Reuters) - China denied allegations
on Wednesday that its firms had exported banned goods to North Korea,
after Japanese media reported that China-made missile transporters were
sold to Pyongyang in violation of a U.N. Security Council resolution.
The
Asahi Shimbun newspaper cited Japanese government sources as saying a
Chinese company exported four large vehicles to North Korea last August
that were capable of transporting and launching ballistic missiles.
Concerns
that Beijing had sold banned military goods to the hermit state
surfaced in April after a modern missile transporter some Western
military experts thought to be of possible Chinese design and origin was
seen in a military parade to celebrate the North's founder.
"Chinese
companies have not exported any items which have been banned by
relevant U.N. Security Council resolutions or Chinese law. Related
reports are incorrect," China's Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Weimin
said at a regular press briefing.
The Foreign Ministry denied it
had broken any rules in April but the United States said it would push
Beijing to tighten up enforcement of the U.N. ban.
China is North
Korea's main economic and diplomatic backer, seeing it as a buffer
against U.S. influence in the region. Beijing is also a major supplier
of food aid and oil to Pyongyang, which remains isolated by sanctions
over its nuclear ambitions and rocket launches.
Under United
Nations Security Council resolutions from 2006 and 2009, all states are
banned from helping North Korea with its ballistic missile programme,
its nuclear activities as well as supplying heavy weapons.
The
Japanese report gave details of the vehicle shipment, including the name
and date of the cargo ship, as seen by U.S., Japanese and South Korean
satellites.
Japan's Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba would not
confirm the report's accuracy when asked by an opposition lawmaker at
parliament, saying it was an intelligence matter.
"I'm aware of
the media report and I am closely watching the issue. But it is not
appropriate to give details of the communication and the situation at
this place," he said.
(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Additional
reporting by Sui-Lee Wee in Beijing and Kaori Kaneko in Tokyo; Writing
by Michael Martina; Editing by Ken Wills and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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