Bush Says N. Korea Must Do More, Human Rights Under Scrutiny

Bush Says N. Korea Must Do More, Human Rights Under Scrutiny

SEOUL, South Korea -- Following talks here this week with South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, U.S. President George W. Bush said North Korea must do more if it wants to retire its membership in the "axis of evil." And for the first time during the six-party talks, U.S. diplomacy appears focused on North Korea's human rights record.

Seoul was the first stop of Bush's last tour of Asia while in the White House. At a press conference following his third meeting with Lee since the conservative South Korean president took office in February, a reporter asked Bush if North Korea still deserves membership in the "axis of evil."

"That's to be determined," the U.S. president responded.

Despite Pyongyang's declaration of its plutonium-based nuclear weapons program and the recent destruction of the cooling tower at its Yongbyon reactor, Bush said North Korea has a long way to go.

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