Articles by "CNN News"
Showing posts with label CNN News. Show all posts


Washington, Mar 10: US President Donald Trump will not meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un unless North Korea takes "concrete and verifiable actions" toward denuclearisation, White House press secretary Sarah Sanders has said, according to a CNN report.
"They have made some major promises. They have made promises to denuclearise. They have made promises to stop nuclear and missile testing," Sanders said.
"We're not going to have this meeting take place until we see concrete actions that match the words and the rhetoric of North Korea."
Sanders' comments on Friday cast doubt on the President's much-ballyhooed agreement to meet the North Korean leader, with the White House appearing to impose new conditions that were not apparent a day earlier. The South Korean national security adviser said Kim is "committed to denuclearisation," but there was no indication that North Korea had promised to take steps toward denuclearisation in order to secure a meeting with the US President.
Instead, Kim only promised to stop nuclear and ballistic missile testing and said he accepted the right of the US and South Korea to move forward with joint military exercises later this year.
Sanders' words on Friday also marked the White House's first comments preconditioning the meeting.
In a statement the previous evening, Sanders said Trump "will accept the invitation to meet with Kim Jong Un at a place and time to be determined" and that the US looks "forward to the denuclearisation of North Korea."
But Sanders on Friday repeatedly claimed that North Korea had "promised" to denuclearize and said Pyongyang would need to take "concrete and verifiable actions" toward that aim for Trump and Kim to meet.
"The President will not have the meeting without having concrete steps or seeing concrete actions taken by North Korea," she said.
Sanders did not respond to requests to clarify her comments, but a White House official signaled Trump wasn't wavering in his commitment to meet with Kim.
"The invitation has been extended and accepted, and that stands," the White House official said.
Sanders' comments appeared to realign the White House's position with the one senior administration officials had laid out in the days before Trump stunned the world by agreeing to meet face-to-face with Kim.
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson on Thursday said hours before Trump's agreement that the US was still a long way from agreeing to direct talks. A senior administration official said days earlier North Korea would need to take "concrete steps" toward denuclearization before the US would agree to talks.
Tom Countryman, a former acting undersecretary of state for arms control and international security, said Friday that Sanders' remarks brought "confusion."
"What the North Koreans have promised to do is not to conduct nuclear and ballistic missile tests prior to and during these negotiations. And they have said that the goal is denuclearization, but they have not said that denuclearisation will occur before this meeting takes place," Countryman said on CNN. UNI


Washington, Mar 9: US President Donald Trump has agreed to meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, the White House announced, setting the scene for an unprecedented encounter between two nations that only recently threatened to wipe each other out, the CCN News has reported.
The meeting, which would be the first between a sitting US president and a North Korean leader, will take place by May, according to South Korea's national security adviser, Chung Eui-yong, who delivered the invitation to Trump after a visit by his delegation to Pyongyang earlier this week.
Trump's decision to meet Kim, after a year in which the two have repeatedly traded insults, is a remarkable breakthrough -- albeit one with uncertain consequences. It brings the North Korean regime close to its long-desired aim of recognition on the international stage, and it offers Trump the tantalizing prospect of a historic diplomatic victory.
The South Korean delegation, which landed in Washington, for a debriefing Thursday on the North-South talks, was careful to praise Trump's influence over the developments. Chung said the US President's "leadership" and his administration's pressure on the North Korean regime had "brought us to this juncture."
"He will accept the invitation to meet with Kim Jong Un at a place and time to be determined. We look forward to the denuclearization of North Korea. In the meantime, all sanctions and maximum pressure must remain."
Trump tweeted that "great progress" had been made but there would be no prospect of lifting sanctions until a deal was reached.
South Korea's President Moon described the announcement as "historic" and and thanked both leaders for seeking a diplomatic solution to the denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula.
"This is an almost miraculous event; my administration will prepare toward the May meeting with utmost diligence," he said in remarks read out in Seoul by a Blue House spokesman.
The stunning announcement was the culmination of a diplomatic whirlwind that began with the invitation of a North Korean delegation to attend the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. That event became the venue for a series of carefully orchestrated diplomatic overtures that ended in dramatic fashion at the White House on Thursday.
Trump agreed to meet with Kim within hours of learning of the North Korean leader's offer. Chung, the South Korean national security adviser, arrived at the White House shortly before 2:30 p.m. to meet with his US counterpart, HR McMaster.
Just minutes after 5pm, Trump poked his head in the White House briefing room to tell reporters South Korea would be making a "major announcement."
Chung's delegation appeared outside the West Wing about two hours later. In a brief statement to reporters, Chung said Kim "expressed his eagerness to meet President Trump as soon as possible."
The North Korean leader had told the South Koreans "he is committed to denuclearisation" and pledged that North Korea would "refrain from any further nuclear or missile tests," Chung said. Kim also told the South Koreans he understands that the US and South Korea would move forward with their joint military exercises later this year.
There are many details to be ironed out before any meeting could take place, not least the location. The Panmunjom truce village in the Korean Demilitarised Zone (DMZ), one possible venue, hosted meetings between North and South Korea in the run-up to the Winter Olympics. UNI


Abuja, Nigeria, Feb 28: The Nigerian Government has released the names of the 110 missing girls, some as young as 11 years old, who have not been seen since a raid on their school in Dapchi last week, a CNN News report said on Wednesday.
Fighter jets, helicopters and surveillance planes have all been deployed in the search for the girls, who vanished after suspected Boko Haram militants attacked the Government Girls Science Technical College.
According to a list of names released by the authorities Tuesday, the missing are aged between 11 and 19. 
The names have been verified by a panel of school administrators and government officials, according to a statement by Alhaji Lai Mohammed, Nigeria's Minister of Information and Culture.
As of Monday evening, the Nigerian Air Force had flown a total of 200 hours while searching for the girls. Nigeria's Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshall Sadique Abubakar, has been relocated to Yobe State, where Dapchi is located, to personally supervise the search, the government statement said.
The school is only 275 kilometers (170 miles) from Chibok, where Boko Haram militants kidnapped nearly 300 girls from a school in 2014.
After global outrage and prolonged negotiation, many of the Chibok girls were later freed but more than 100 are still missing, thought to be held in a number of unknown locations.
The father of one of the girls who was taken from Dapchi, Bashir Manzo, told CNN he isn't happy with the way the government has handled the situation.
"My daughter Aisha Kachalla is missing and we can't get any information from school because soldiers are all over there," said Manzo, who is also the newly elected head of the parent's association.
"No security came to Dapchi the day the men came, now over a hundred soldiers have taken over the village."
Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari said the raid was a "national disaster" and promised the families of the missing girls their children would be returned.
"We are sorry that it happened; we share your pain. Let me assure that our gallant armed forces will locate and safely return all the missing girls," Buhari said in a Twitter statement. UNI