China on Tuesday criticised what it said were "irresponsible" remarks made by a U.S. official this week calling for Beijing to do more to curb North Korea's banned nuclear programme.
North
Korea said it had successfully conducted a test of a miniaturised
hydrogen nuclear device on Jan. 6 which, if
true, marks a significant
advance in the isolated state's strike capabilities in contravention of UN Security Council resolutions.
China
is North Korea's lone major ally. A senior State Department official
told reporters North Korea had few avenues to conduct international
business that don't involve China, despite several rounds of economic
sanctions, adding that Beijing could "clearly" do more.
"Many of the remarks made no sense and were not constructive," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told reporters.
Hua spoke ahead of a visit to China this week by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, who has promised to press China to push for more curbs on North Korea's nuclear programme.
Hua urged "relevant countries" to take responsibility and not "point the finger at other people and make irresponsible remarks".
Kerry
is also planning for discussions on the South China Sea, a source of
growing tension between China and Southeast Asian countries with rival
claims.
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