The North has given notice of its plans to launch a rocket by June 4 to deploy a satellite, prompting the three countries to urge a halt to the move that would aid Pyongyang's ability to deliver a nuclear strike, Reuters reported.
At their first three-way summit in Seoul since 2019, the three countries sought to cooperate on security, reiterating positions on regional peace and stability and denuclearization of the peninsula, they said in a joint statement.
Such discussion is an "insult never to be pardoned and a declaration of war against the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK)," however, a spokesman for North Korea's foreign ministry said in a swift riposte.
"To discuss the denuclearization ... today constitutes a grave political provocation and sovereignty violation," the unidentified spokesman said in the statement reported by the North's state media.
Such a move denies the North's inviolable sovereignty and constitution reflecting the unanimous will of all the Korean people, he added.
Chinese Premier Li Qiang called on all parties to reduce tension.
While South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida urged Pyongyang to scrap its plans to launch a second spy satellite into orbit, Li made no mention of the expected launch.
China angered North Korea when it signed on to UN Security Council resolutions sanctioning Pyongyang's nuclear weapons and missile program from 2006 to 2017.
North Korea launched its first military satellite into orbit in November, after two earlier attempts failed in 2023.
SD/PR
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