Bank row threatens North Korea deal
Pyongyang says it will not end its nuclear programme unless bank funds are released.

Yongbyon shutdown
The two Koreas, the US, China, Japan and Russia agreed on February 13 that Pyongyang would shut Yongbyon, the heart of North Korea’s nuclear programme, by mid-April in return for aid and security pledges.
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The US treasury department completed an 18-month investigation into Banco Delta Asia (BDA) earlier this week – which had been blacklisted for its alleged complicity in laundering North Korean money – and banned US banks from doing business with it.
Christopher Hill, the chief US negotiator, said earlier on Saturday that he planned to brief Kim on the issue.
“I don’t think BDA will be an obstacle,” he said before meeting Kim. “I think we’ll work that out.”
On Thursday, Qin Gang, the Chinese foreign ministry spokesman, said that he “deeply” regretted the US decision, which he suggested could destabilise Macau’s financial system and harm the talks.
Bank dispute
North Korea has identified the bank dispute as the reason it stayed away from the six-party talks for more than a year.
A US treasury official said on Saturday that it was up to the Macau authorities to decide whether to release North Korean funds.
“I think they will act responsibly with that information as they have acted responsibly all along,” he added.
Nuclear test
The six-party talks only resumed after the North tested a suspected nuclear device in October.
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The US treasury has barred American banks from dealing with Banco Delta Asia [EPA] |
Mohamed ElBaradei, head of the UN nuclear watchdog, said on Friday that he hoped the April 13 deadline for starting to dismantle North Korea’s nuclear weapons programme could still be met.
ElBaradei, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), said: “If the financial sanctions are over, then we expect the DPRK [North Korea] to invite us to work out the modalities of monitoring and verification” of the deal to close and seal the plutonium-producing reactor.
When asked about admitting nuclear inspectors, Kim said: “Since we will not stop the nuclear facility unless the sanctions are lifted, there is no reason for inspectors to come in.”