China, Russia warn DPRK issue "not a computer game"

APD NEWS

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China warned the situation on the Korean peninsula is serious and “not a computer game” as the US travel ban to the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) came into force on Friday.

China's Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying made the comments at a regular briefing as Japan pushed the US for new sanctions against the DPRK. “It was regrettable that some countries only applied sanctions and overlooked the United Nations Security Council resolution’s requirements for dialogue,” she added.

China's Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said the situation on the Korean peninsula is serious and "not a computer game". /Xinhua Photo

The statement came as the last Americans left the embattled east Asian nation with the US travel ban taking effect on Friday even as Russia called on Washington not to use force amid heightened tensions following Pyongyang’s latest missile test.

Americans leave Pyongyang

Meanwhile, one of the last flights that left Pyongyang on Thursday, with many Americans on board just ahead of the ban, was to the Chinese capital Beijing, according to media reports.

American tourist Nicholas Burkhead, 35, was among the last American tourists to leave the DPRK, in that Air Koryo flight to Beijing after visiting Pyongyang and Kaesong city near the heavily armed border with Republic of Korea (ROK).

“I was surprised at how friendly everyone was,” Burkhead was quoted saying by Reuters. “It was very relaxing — beautiful scenery and they fed us very well in the restaurants there, but the exchange rate wasn’t too good for the local won,” he said.

A tourist takes a selfie during a visit to a subway station in Pyongyang on July 23, 2017. /AFP Photo

The flight from the DPRK capital also had on board American aid workers who hoped they would return some day to continue humanitarian work in the embattled Asian nations, reported the Associated Press.

Heidi Linton, director of Christian Friends of Korea, who has been working in DPRK for over two decades, said she worried about the people her aid group helped, if her exemption was not granted soon. “We started a hepatitis B program and we have 705 patients that have been started on life-saving medicine, that if they go off that medicine then their lives are in danger,” she was quoted as saying in a Reuters report.

The United States in July announced a ban on American citizens from traveling to DPRK, effective September 1. The move has a provision for journalists and aid workers to apply for exemptions from the ban. However, it is not yet clear whether any American has requested, or been granted, such an exemption.

Also, the US state department on Thursday night was unable to give an estimate on the number of Americans still inside DPRK, Reuters reported.

North Korean state media has described the ban as a “sordid” attempt to limit human exchanges.

North Korea is currently holding two Korean-American academics and a missionary, as well as three South Korean nationals who were doing missionary work, according to a New York Post report

This month, North Korea released a Canadian pastor who had been imprisoned there for more than two years, the Post reported.

US, allies in show of force

This handout photo taken on August 31, 2017 and provided by Republic of Korea's Defence Ministry in Seoul shows ROK F-15K fighter jets dropping bombs at a shooting range in Gangwon Province, east of Seoul, during a joint military drill. /AFP Photo

A day before the travel ban came into force, the US conducted another round of military drills with allies ROK and Japan on Thursday, prompting strong response from Russia and China.

US heavy bombers and stealth jet fighters delivered a show of force directed at the DPRK in a live-fire drill on Thursday, two days after Pyongyang’s provocative test launch of a ballistic missile that flew over Japan, an AFP report said.

“Two B-1B ‘Lancer’ bombers from Guam and four F-35B stealth jet fighters from the Marine Corps' Iwakuni airbase in Japan joined four ROK jet fighters and two from Japan in the exercise over Japanese and ROK air space,” the report said quoting US military officials said.

“US and ROK aircraft dropped live munitions onto the Pilseung shooting range in Gangwon province, some 150 kilometres south of the Demilitarized Zone dividing the two Koreas,” the report added.

“Counterproductive and dangerous”: Russia

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (L) spoke with US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson (R) on Wednesday. Lavrov stressed Russia believed imposing more sanctions to pressure Pyongyang to end its missile program was "counterproductive and dangerous." /AFP Photo

Other global powers and nations in the region have expressed concern over the escalation in tensions between the DPRK and US and its allies.

Late on Wednesday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov warned the US against new sanctions, saying such a move could be "counterproductive and dangerous," Fox News reported.

In a phone call with US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, Lavrov stressed Russia believed imposing more sanctions to pressure Pyongyang to end its missile program was "counterproductive and dangerous," the report said.

Lavrov also "underscored... the need to refrain from any military steps that could have unpredictable consequences," the foreign ministry in Moscow said.

Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova urged peace talks, saying that "at the moment only Russia and China have put forward a realistic initiative".

"Once again we call all the involved sides to urgently start establishing dialogue without preconditions, based on the proposals on the Russian and Chinese road map," Zakharova said.

This handout photo taken on August 31, 2017 and provided by Republic of Korea's Defence Ministry in Seoul shows bombs hitting a mock target at a shooting range in Gangwon Province, east of Seoul, during a ROK-US joint military drill. /AFP Photo

Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin in an article – released by Kremlin on Thursday ahead of the BRICS summit in Xiamen, east China – warned the US and its allies against going down a “dead-end road” and called for talks to resolve the issue.

"Russia believes that the policy of putting pressure on Pyongyang to stop its nuclear missile program is misguided and futile," Putin said in the article. "The region's problems should only be settled through a direct dialogue of all the parties concerned without any preconditions. Provocations, pressure and militarist and insulting rhetoric are a dead-end road," he added.

Spain orders DPRK to reduce embassy staff

In a related development on Thursday, Spain told the DPRK embassy in Madrid to reduce its staff in the country in protest against Pyongyang's repeated missile launches and nuclear weapons tests.

The DPRK's nuclear and ballistic missile programmes "create a serious threat to peace in the region and to global security," the Spanish foreign ministry said in a statement.

This picture from Democratic People's Republic of Korea's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) taken on August 29, 2017 and released on August 30, 2017 shows North Korea's intermediate-range strategic ballistic rocket Hwasong-12 lifting off from the launching pad at an undisclosed location near Pyongyang. /Photo AFP

"The embassy of the DPRK had been warned by the foreign ministry that the continuation of these actions would have consequences on bilateral relations," it added.

"Today the DPRK ambassador has been summoned and the position of the Spanish government has been reiterated and he was informed of the decision to reduce the number of diplomatic staff at his representation in Madrid."

The North Korean embassy, which opened in 2014, is staffed by an ambassador and two diplomats, a foreign ministry spokeswoman said. "One of the two diplomats will have to leave by September 30," she said.

(CGTN)