Tillerson in
Thailand to press junta on North Korea ties
US
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson landed in Bangkok on Tuesday with a plea to
the kingdom to curb business ties with North Korea, as Washington rounds up
allies for its bid to halt Pyongyang's nuclear ambitions.
Tillerson
is the highest level American diplomat to visit Thailand since a 2014 coup
strained ties between the longtime friends and saw China copy up to Bangkok
with massive military sales and infrastructure deals.
Thailand
is one of a raft of Southeast Asian countries that hosts a North Korean embassy
and enjoys valuable bilateral trade with the reclusive regime.In 2014 the two
countries shared trade worth $126 million, according to Thailand's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, nearly a three-fold increase since 2009.
America's
top diplomat will press Thailand to crack down on North Korean firms that open
fronts in Bangkok and use the capital as a trading hub, said acting US
Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian Affairs Susan Thornton.
He
will also lean on the kingdom to tighten visa requirements for North Koreans
entering Thailand and squeeze its diplomatic mission, Thornton added.
Tillerson's
one-day visit follows a regional forum in Manila, where the former ExxonMobil
CEO hailed a tough new UN sanctions regime on North Korea over its growing
nuclear arsenal. Those sanctions could cost North Korea $1 billion a year. They
were levied -- with the agreement of North Korean lifeline China -- in response
to the launch of two intercontinental ballistic missile tests last month.
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'Ups and downs' -
The
US envoy will also urge Thailand to take in more North Korean refugees, said
Thornton. The kingdom has long been a transit route for defectors who make the
arduous journey through China, then into Laos or Cambodia and Thailand, where
they seek sanctuary at the South Korean Embassy.
Thailand
does not grant official status to refugees.
After
landing in Bangkok Tillerson, who visited Thailand often as an executive for
ExxonMobil, told US embassy staff he wanted to "grow" the
relationship between America and its oldest Asian ally, "even in its ups
and downs".
President
Donald Trump's administration is reshaping America's approach to the Thai junta
after relations hit the buffers following the 2014 coup.
The
US condemned the takeover and distanced itself from the regime, trimming back
military aid. But relations are on a better footing under Trump, with the US
president extending an invitation to junta chief Prayut Chan-O-Cha. The thaw
also comes amid Washington's growing concerns over rival superpower China's
clout in the region.
Beijing
entices its smaller neighbours by offering massive investment decoupled from
human rights concerns, which appeals to leaders weary of US pressure.
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Thailand
is a lynchpin country in China's massive trade and infrastructure 'One Belt,
One Road' strategy. It was not immediately clear how firmly the former oilman
would push the junta government on its crackdown on political rights.
The
US wants Thailand to "emerge as a strengthened democracy that respects and
guarantees human rights and fundamental freedoms," said US embassy
spokesperson Steve Castonguay. Tillerson is also due to pay respects to
Thailand's late King Bhumibol Adulyadej, who has been lying in state at the
Grand Palace since his death in October 2016.
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