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Saudi Crown Prince, South Korean Pres. tackle oil facilities attack

TOKYO, Sept 18 (KUNA) -- Saudi Arabia and South Korea agreed Wednesday to strengthen partnerships in the fight against terrorist acts, such as the recent drone attack on Saudi oil facilities, the South Korean Presidential Office said.
In phone talks, Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince, Deputy Premier and Defense Minister Mohammad bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al-Saud and South Korean President Moon Jae-in and also emphasized the importance of a unified response to the problem by the international community, the office said, according to Yonhap News Agency.
"The attack on Saudi oil facilities represents a threat to security not only in South Korea but also in the whole world, and the international community needs to deal resolutely with the issue," Moon told the crown prince, the presidential office said.
The president reaffirmed Seoul's support for global efforts to root out terrorism and stressed that such an attack that jeopardizes international energy security should not recur, it added.
The Saudi leader agreed that the international community should be united in handling the matter.
He requested South Korea's help in a plan to beef up his nation's air defense system and the two sides agreed to continue consultations on it, the office said.
Moon also pointed out that Saudi Arabia is South Korea's top oil supplier.
Last year, South Korea imported 323 million barrels of crude from Saudi Arabia, accounting for nearly 30 percent of its total oil imports, official data show.
The crown prince told Moon that while his country's crude oil production has halved due to the terror attack, it would be possible to recover the output "100 percent" within 10 days, the office noted. (end) mk.mb