North Korea Asked US To Cancel Top-Level Talks: Report

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
North Korea asked the United States to delay planned high-level talks in New York
Thursday, a day after Washington abruptly announced the meeting's postponement.The US State Department said Wednesday that the encounter
between Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and top North Korean official Kim Yong Chol, initially scheduled for Thursday, had been shelved for
"a later date".No further explanation was given, but Pyongyang is demanding sanctions imposed on it over its weapons programmes are eased,
while Washington insists they should stay in place until it denuclearises.South Korean foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha said it was Pyongyang
that had asked for a delay."The US told us that it received a message from the North to postpone the meeting," Kang told lawmakers,
according to Yonhap news agency.South Korean reports said that Kim -- one of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's right-hand men -- had been
scheduled to catch a lunchtime flight from Beijing to New York on Wednesday.But his reservation was repeatedly cancelled and rebooked on
Tuesday, the Chosun Ilbo newspaper reported, until it was cancelled for good.The sudden postponement came only two days after the US State
Department announced Pompeo would meet the North Korean in New York to discuss progress towards denuclearisation and plans for a second
summit between President Donald Trump and leader Kim Jong Un.Trump and Kim held a historic summit in June in Singapore -- the first ever
between the two countries -- where they signed a vaguely worded deal on denuclearisation.Little progress has been made since then, with the
two countries sparring over the exact meaning of the agreement.Despite warm words from Trump since meeting Kim in Singapore, his
administration has insisted on maintaining pressure on Pyongyang until a final agreement is reached.North Korea, which is subject to
multiple UN Security Council sanctions over its weapons programmes, warned last week that it would "seriously" consider returning to nuclear
weapons development unless Washington lifts the restrictions.Koo Kab-woo of the University of North Korean Studies said that the differences
over sanctions were probably the "biggest reason" for the postponement."Kim Jong Un needs a visible outcome that can be felt by the ordinary
people, and for that, North Korea desperately needs sanctions to be lifted," Koo told AFP."If there was a problem, it's possible there was a
clash between Pyongyang's demand for sanctions to be relaxed even by a little bit and Washington's firm stance that the restrictions will
remain," he added.(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by TheIndianSubcontinent staff and is published from a syndicated
feed.)