North Korea's UN Mission said sanctions imposed by the Security Council in early August on the Foreign Trade Bank of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, which is in charge of international transactions, made payment impossible.
The mission said Ambassador Ja Song Nam met Undersecretary-General for Management Jan Beagle yesterday afternoon to request the opening of "banking channels" to make the DPRK's required $183,458 payment for 2018 for the U.N.'s regular operations and separate budgets for peacekeeping and international tribunals.
It imposed tougher sanctions in response to Pyongyang's sixth and strongest nuclear test explosion on Sept. 3, and even tougher measures in December after its test on Nov. 29 of its most powerful intercontinental ballistic missile yet.
The United States banned the Foreign Trade Bank from the US financial system in 2013, and the DPRK Mission blamed the Trump administration for spurring last August's U.N. sanctions against the bank.
This "shows the ulterior political objectives of the sanctions maneuvers pursued by the US and its followers and how cruel and uncivilized the sanctions are," the DPRK said.
The mission asked the UN to provide a "lifeline" and, through its management chief, "to secure promptly the bank transaction channel through which the DPRK can pay regularly its financial contribution.
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