The UN chief expressed optimism on Thursday that the full denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula could become a reality, following last week’s historic joint declaration from the leaders of the north and south, which eased months of rising tension over North Korea’s nuclear programme.
In an interview with the BBC’s flagship morning radio show, the Today programme, during his current visit to London, Secretary-General António Guterres, said that after talking to South Korea’s President Moon Jae-in on Monday that “things are on track for a meaningful negotiation and I believe it’s in everyone’s interest.”
The Republic of Korea’s leader, met his counterpart in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), Kim Jong Un, at a historic summit on the border between the two countries last Friday, in which they agreed to work towards a lasting peace and strengthen inter-Korean ties.
Mr. Guterres was also asked if he was worried that the United States is reportedly considering withdrawing from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), involving Iran and the five Permanent Members of the Security Council plus Germany and the European Union,
The JCPOA, signed in 2015, limits Iran nuclear development programme, in exchange for the lifting of sanctions, and the UN chief described it as “an important achievement”.
“The JCPOA was an important diplomatic victory and I think it will be important to preserve it,” he said. “But I also believe that there are areas in which it will be very important to have a meaning dialogue because I see the region in a very dangerous position.”
“If one day there is a better agreement to replace it it’s fine, but we should not scrap it unless we have a good alternative,” said the Secretary-General.
“I don’t see how Syria can be reconstructed with the support of the international community if there is no political solution in which all groups of Syrian society feel represented” – UN Secretary General António Guterres
On Syria, the UN chief said that there was a “risk of fragmentation” of the entire country after more than seven years of brutal civil conflict.
“I don’t think that anybody can win the war…On the other hand, I don’t see how Syria can be reconstructed with the support of the international community if there is no political solution in which all groups of Syrian society feel represented,” he said.
“We need to have a political solution that all Syrians feel comfortable with, and that requires a level of dialogue that until now has not been possible,” he said, adding that “we have not yet had the leverage to create the conditions for that to happen.”
He said that he had “not given up” on making warring parties in Syria accountable for their use of chemical weapons.
“I still believe that we need to insist, and we are looking for avenues that might allow, to create a mechanism of attribution agreed by the Security Council, that will be able to define who’s responsible for any chemical attack, creating the conditions for accountability.”
He added that “the re-establishment of a mechanism of accountability in Syria is very important and I will not give up on that.”
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