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NUKEWARS
Japan, China, SKorea FMs to meet next month: reports
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Feb 6, 2015


Switzerland halts training grants to N.Korean officers
Geneva (AFP) Feb 6, 2015 - Switzerland said Friday it had halted a programme offering grants to allow North Korean officers to undergo training in the wealthy Alpine country.

The Swiss defence ministry confirmed a report by public broadcaster RTS that a programme that had allowed two representatives of the Pyongyang regime to come and take classes at the Geneva Centre for Security Policy each year since 2011.

The grants, which have paid out a total of 160,000 Swiss francs ($174,000, 152,000 euros) in the past three years, were created in a bid to help the communist regime to open up.

Participants in the programme reportedly analysed international security issues like the problem of weapons of mass destruction, terrorism and human rights violations.

The Arab Spring uprisings and the Ukrainian crisis have figured on the curriculum, with participants discussing the role of the armed forces and democracy issues, according to RTS.

But concerns were raised after revelations last year that North Korean officers participated in an unauthorised exercises at a shooting range.

After some parliamentarians raised questions about the grants, the defence ministry decided to halt them, it confirmed.

North Korean officers will still be permitted to take part in the programme, but will need to finance their studies themselves, RTS said.

The foreign ministers of Japan, China and South Korea appear set to meet next month for the first time in three years in the latest sign of easing tensions in East Asia, reports said Friday.

If the gathering goes ahead, it will be the first trilateral at such a high level since April 2012 -- before Sino-Japanese ties nose-dived over a lingering territorial dispute.

Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida and his counterpart Wang Yi of China and Yun Byung-se of South Korea will meet in Seoul in late March, the Yomiuri Shimbun reported.

South Korea's Yonhap carried a similar report.

Any such meeting of foreign ministers could pave the way for a three-way summit, last held in May 2012.

Asked about the report, Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga appeared to confirm the meeting, saying the date and the venue "are being coordinated" among diplomats but "nothing is yet decided".

The news comes after Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and Chinese President Xi Jinping broke the ice with a frosty handshake on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum in November.

Japan and China have long been at odds over the sovereignty of uninhabited islands in the East China Sea, which Japan administers and calls the Senkakus but which China claims as the Diaoyus.

Relations soured in 2012 when the Japanese government angered China by nationalising some of the islands.

Since then, Tokyo and Beijing have routinely butted heads over the issue, with official Chinese ships and aircraft regularly testing Japanese forces.

The November meeting between Abe and Xi came on the heels of the joint issuance of largely similar statements on the dispute that observers noted were sufficiently vague to allow both sides to claim victory to domestic audiences.

In the planned meeting, a range of issues including economy, energy, six-party talks to address North Korea's nuclear programme, and counter-terror measures are expected to be discussed, the Yomiuri said.

kh/hg/jah

April


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