Pyongyang, December 20 (KCNA) -- A spokesman for the Foreign Ministry
of the DPRK gave the following answer to a question put by KCNA Saturday
as regards the U.S. accusation against the DPRK over a cyber attack on a
movie company in the U.S.:
Obama, Kerry and other high-ranking authorities of the U.S. cried
out for sort of counter-measure Friday, claiming that the results of the
investigation into the cyber-attack on the Sony Pictures Entertainment
proved that the DPRK was behind it.
They, without presenting any specific evidence, are asserting they
can not open it to public as it is "sensitive information."
Clear evidence is needed to charge a sovereign state with a crime.
Reference to the past cyber-attacks quite irrelevant with the DPRK
and a string of presumptive assertions such as "similarity" and
"repetition" can convince no one.
The U.S. act of daring charge the DPRK with a crime based on absurd
"investigation results" reveals its inveterate bitterness toward the
DPRK.
This is proven, as in the recent cyber-attack, by the recent urge
made by a man called a "human rights special envoy" of the U.S. State
Department to movie-makers that they should harass the north Korean
government and keep alive scenes hurting the dignity of the its supreme
leadership.
The U.S. ruling quarters are working hard to divert the criticism of
its administration to the DPRK as the plan of putting on show the
anti-DPRK film on Christmas Day canceled due to the controversial
cyber-attack, causing an uproar in the U.S.
We will never pardon those undesirable elements keen on hurting the
dignity of the supreme leadership of the DPRK. In case we retaliate
against them, we will target with legitimacy those responsible for the
anti-DPRK acts and their bases, not engaging in terrorist attack aimed
at the innocent audience in cinemas.
The army of the DPRK has the will and ability to do so.
The U.S. State Secretary is going to justify the production of the
movie hurting the dignity of the supreme leadership of a sovereign state
while trumpeting about the freedom of expression. He should know that
there is punishment of libel in enforcement of international law.
We propose the U.S. side conducting a joint investigation into the
case, given that Washington is slandering Pyongyang by spreading
unfounded rumor.
We have a way to prove that we have nothing to do with the case without resorting to torture as what the CIA does.
The U.S. should bear in mind that it will face serious consequences
in case it rejects our proposal for joint investigation and presses for
what it called countermeasure while finding fault with the DPRK. -0
No comments:
Post a Comment