US: North Korea talks not dead

Envoy says moves to restart reactor do not mean disarmament talks are unravelling.

YONGBYON NUCLEAR SITE
North Korea blew up Yongbyon's cooling tower in June but halted dismantling work in recent weeks [AFP] blew up Yongbyon's cooling tower in June but halted dismantling work in recent weeks [AFP]

North Korea, which tested an atomic weapon in October 2006, began disabling its ageing reactor and other plants at Yongbyon last November under a pact with South Korea, China, Japan, Russia and the United States.

But it announced last month that it had halted work in protest against Washington’s refusal to drop it from its blacklist of alleged state sponsors of terrorism, as promised under the deal.

Washington says the North must first accept strict outside verification of the nuclear inventory that Pyongyang handed over in June.

Hill said North Korea must agree to verification steps but acknowledged that the North Koreans may find it difficult to accept such an intrusive process.

“It’s a tough process, it’s not about what you write on a piece of paper, it’s about what you do on the ground, it’s about going into nuclear facilities in a way that we haven’t done before,” he said.

Removing IAEA seals

North Korean confirmed on Friday that it was working to restart its plutonium-producing reactor and the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said on Monday that Pyongyang had asked it to remove seals and surveillance equipment from the complex.

“I don’t think there is any immediate potential for restarting the thing”

Christopher Hill on the Yongbyon nuclear reactor

Hill declined to comment on the IAEA report but expressed doubts that North Korea could quickly get the site going again, saying it could take months to reactivate the reprocessing plant and more than a year for the whole reactor complex.

“I don’t think there is any immediate potential for restarting the thing,” he said.

Hill’s remarks came a day after George Bush, the US president, expressed concern to his Chinese counterpart Hu Jintao on Sunday over North Korea’s plans.

“The two presidents agreed that they would work hard to convince the North to continue down the path established in the six-party talks toward denuclearisation,” Gordon Johndroe, a White House spokesman, said.

The Bush administration is trying in its waning months in office to salvage the effort to get North Korea to give up its nuclear arms.

Hill said Condoleezza Rice, the US secretary of state, “had a wide-ranging good discussion” with Yu Myung-hwan, the South Korean foreign minister, on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York and that she would meet other participants from the six-party process during the week.

Source: News Agencies