产品展示
  • 路虎发现5改装后排座椅升高器座椅加高底座发现5座椅增高配件支架
  • 13-2019款丰田RAV4扶手箱改装加长荣放汽车中央手扶盖子增高配件
  • 正品哈曼卡通用型汽车中置喇叭4寸中音音响喇叭改装扬声器升级板
  • 08-14别克老英朗汽车内饰改装中控配件装饰仪表台防晒隔热避光垫
  • 适用于本田十代思域高音喇叭16-21款思域喇叭罩音响无损改装专用
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

汽车配件

N. Korea open to high

2024-06-07 01:28:53      点击:469
Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida,<strong></strong> center, is pictured as he exits a conference with chiefs of major South Korean business associations at a hotel in Seoul, May 8. Yonhap
Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, center, is pictured as he exits a conference with chiefs of major South Korean business associations at a hotel in Seoul, May 8. Yonhap

North Korea's vice foreign minister said Pyongyang is willing to hold high-level talks with Tokyo if Japan shows a change of stance on pending issues, such as the abduction of Japanese citizens by the North, the country's state media reported Monday.

The statement by the North's Vice Foreign Minister Pak Sang-gil, carried by its Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), came after Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida recently expressed his wish to initiate high-level talks with Pyongyang to arrange a summit with the North's leader, Kim Jong-un.

According to the KCNA, Park said "there is no reason for the DPRK and Japan not to meet" if Tokyo is not being "shackled by the past and seeks a way out for improving the relations." DPRK stands for the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, the North's official name.

The vice foreign minister noted that Japan was "clamoring for settlement over the abduction issue," which he claimed "had already been resolved."

Pak argued Kishida has consistently expressed the desire for a summit "without preconditions" after he took office but added, "we do not know what he really wants to get from it."

He added that Japan should demonstrate its willingness to resolve issues through concrete actions rather than mere words.

Following the KCNA report, Kishida reiterated to reporters his willingness to engage with the North, saying he himself has approached the abduction issue with the determination to face it directly and make specific progress.

Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno refrained from commenting at a press briefing, citing concerns over possibly affecting future negotiations. (Yonhap)


N. Korea 'expands, reorganizes' military units with operational combat missions: KCNA
N. Korea again on virus alert as cases rise in S. Korea, China