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G8 leaders warn of tougher actions against North Korea

May 20, 2012 - 20:00 By Korea Herald
WASHINGTON (Yonhap News) ― Leaders of the world’s eight advanced nations wrapped up their summit in the U.S. Saturday with a warning that North Korea will face stronger punishment in case of further provocations.

“We continue to have deep concerns about provocative actions of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea that threaten regional stability,” they said in a statement on the results of a two-day summit at the Camp David presidential retreat in Maryland. The North’s formal name was used in the diplomatic document titled “Camp David Declaration.”

U.S. President Barack Obama hosted the annual meeting with his counterparts from Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia, and Britain designed to address major global economic and political challenges.

The leaders condemned the North’s long-range rocket launch in mid-April which ended in failure.

“We urge the DPRK to comply with its international obligations and abandon all nuclear and ballistic missile programs in a complete, verifiable, and irreversible manner,” read the statement.

The international community is keeping close tabs on the communist regime amid worries that it will take additional provocative actions such as missile and nuclear tests as well as attacks on South Korea.

“We affirm our will to call on the UN Security Council to take action, in response to additional DPRK acts, including ballistic missile launches and nuclear tests,” the leaders said.

They also expressed concern about human rights violations in the North including political prisoner camps and handling of South Korean and Japanese people abducted by Pyongyang decades ago.

Earlier Saturday, meanwhile, Obama reiterated an overture coupled with a warning message.

“All of us agree that North Korea is violating its international obligations and that there is a path for them to rejoin the international community,” he told reporters.

The G8 leaders discussed North Korea, along with Iran, Syria and Burma, in their working dinner on Friday that focused on global security issues, according to White House officials.

In the second-day session, Europe’s financial crisis was mainly discussed, they added.

“The global economic recovery shows signs of promise, but significant headwinds persist,” the Camp David Declaration read.

The G8 nations agreed to “take all necessary steps to strengthen and reinvigorate our economies and combat financial stresses,” affirming their shared interest in dealing with financial crises in Greece and several other European nations, according to the statement.