North Korea yesterday slammed US President George W. Bush for
stigmatizing its leader Kim Jong-il as a "tyrant."
"It is a blatant violation of the spirit of the joint statement
of the six-party talks that calls for 'respect for sovereignty' and
'peaceful coexistence'," said a spokesperson of the country's
Foreign Ministry.
He said it was hard to discern whether Bush is aware of the
content of the joint statement or he intentionally pretended to be
ignorant of it, but "what is clear is that he does not know about
the trend of the times at all."
Bush said in a meeting with Brazilian leaders on Sunday that
Japan was on the same side as the US in terms of dealing with a
tyrant in North Korea.
"These remarks, made by the US president against the backdrop of
his administration's intensified moves for economic and financial
sanctions against us, quite contrary to the spirit of the joint
statement, arouse our serious concern about the prospect of
implementing the joint statement," the spokesperson said.
"It deprives us of any trust in the negotiators of the US side
to the six-party talks," he added.
He emphasized that North Korea will never pardon whoever dares
to speak ill of its leaders in any case.
The fifth round of six-way talks is expected to begin in Beijing
on Wednesday after North Korea, South Korea, the US, Japan, Russia
and China agreed in late September to denuclearize the Korean
Peninsula in a verifiable and peaceful way.
(Xinhua News Agency November 9, 2005)