North Korea hints at curbing money laundering (Reuters) Updated: 2006-01-26 09:31
North Korea, facing a U.S. crackdown on suspected illicit activities, has
hinted it might observe international standards on money laundering but
Washington wants action, Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill said on
Wednesday.
In a Reuters interview, Hill, who heads the U.S. delegation to six-country
talks aimed at persuading Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear programs, said the
hint came when he met in Beijing last week with North Korean counterpart Kim
Kye-gwan and Chinese officials in an effort to restart the stalled negotiations.
The United States in recent months has cracked down on several firms
suspected of involvement in counterfeiting, money laundering and drug
trafficking by North Korea.
Pyongyang is believed to earn as much as $1 billion annually from these
activities, U.S. officials say.
The North has said it would be unthinkable to return to the nuclear talks
when Washington is trying to impose "financial sanctions."
But in the Beijing meeting, Hill said the North Koreans "indicated they would
be prepared to subscribe to international norms with respect to money laundering
and would want to cooperate internationally on these issues."
Hill, who has tried to convince Pyongyang the crackdown is a law enforcement
matter unrelated to the six-party talks, refused to provide more details or say
if the North's comments were a hopeful sign.
"We're not looking here for words. We're more interested in actions. We'd
like to see this (illicit) activity cease," he said.
Hill said he "made very clear that financial measures -- what we'd call
defensive measures -- are quite separate from the issue of the six-party talks
and the way to end those measures was to end the activity that those measures
were designed to counter."
The United States is determined "to protect ourselves against money
laundering and other activities which we believe very much lie in the law
enforcement area" and this is no different from other countries who guard
against "unlawful behavior coming from abroad," he said.
Analysts have said North Korea is feeling a pinch from the crackdown but U.S.
officials said neighboring China and South Korea are easing the shortfall with
increased aid.
A team of U.S. Treasury Department financial crimes investigators on Monday
briefed South Korean officials on the North's illicit activities.
Afterward, South Korea refused to take sides in the North Korea-U.S. row and
urged that Washington's crackdown should be separated from the nuclear talks.
Hill, stressing he has nothing to do with the crackdown because he is not a
law enforcement official, said he believes the U.S. Treasury is satisfied with
South Korean cooperation.
He insisted U.S.-South relations "are really quite good" and accused South
Korean media of trying to exaggerate differences over the North.
On a surprise trip to China this month, Kim Jong-il toured industrial and
commercial facilities as Chinese officials tried to show how the North "could
have a better future if they opened up and embraced a market economy," Hill
said.
The Chinese, hosts of the six-party process, were optimistic nuclear
negotiations stalled since last November would resume in February, but so far no
date has been agreed, Hill said.
Last September, the North agreed in principle to scrap its nuclear arms in
exchange for aid and security guarantees but there has been no progress since
then.
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