Some months ago, when the UN General Assembly was trying to pass the resolution, the North Korean authorities wanted to negotiate. In exchange for deletion of the critical elements of the resolution, they would allow the UN special rapporteur to visit North Korea. At the same time we hear, according to satellite information, that one of the prison camps in North Korea, Yodok, is all of a sudden disappearing and the camp facilities are disappearing. Perhaps this was done in order to assure the special rapporteur that this is not a political prison camp but rather a collective farm only. It's a strategy of deception, in other words. We are saying they have to dismantle the political prison camp system, not the camp facility. They can transfer inmates to other camps. That's not dismantlement in the true sense of the word. I think the same applies to the dialogue. The international community engaged in dialogue for—what?—20 years, over the nuclear issue. What's the result? Nothing.
This authority is impervious and totally impossible. So, diplomatically, yes, the international community, including the South Korean government and the Canadian government, can engage in dialogue, but we have to make sure that we know what they are saying is not really what they are saying. They don't mean what they are saying, so we have to be careful. Most of the time we are the losers, because, as Mr. Jang said, the western societies, the international community, have been deceived for so long and continue to be deceived.
So we have to deal with North Korea.