国际新闻:IAEA: N.Korea shuts 5 nuclear facilities
KUALA LUMPUR - The UN nuclear watchdog on Wednesday said it had verified that North Korea had closed all five of its nuclear facilities, marking a key step in the effort to get the country to give up its nuclear programmes.
"Yes we now verify that all the five nuclear facilities have been shut down," Mohamed ElBaradei, the chief of the International Atomic Energy Agency told reporters in the Malaysian capital.
US says much work to be done at NK talks
US envoy Christopher Hill said there was much work to be done at Wednesday's new round of six-party talks on reining in North Korea's nuclear programme but held out the hope of agreeing to a disarmament schedule.
US Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill speaks to reporters as he leaves his hotel in Beijing July 18, 2007. [Reuters] |
Hill told reporters late on Tuesday that in a meeting with North Korea's chief negotiator, Kim Kye-gwan, he had pressed the idea of a timetable that would conclude the second phase of disarmament by the end of the year.
That would involve North Korea's declaration of all its nuclear activities and permanently disabling Yongbyon.
"We all know that we've got a long road ahead of us with many steps," he told reporters on Wednesday. "Maybe we could try to agree on getting these next phase things done in calendar year 07."
There had been no agreement on plans for that phase yet, he said, but North Korea and the United States seemed to be in the same "general vicinity".
Part of the phase would include pushing forward working groups which would deal with technical aspects of any agreement and improving political relations.
The third phase would require North Korea handing over fissile nuclear materials and other atomic arms infrastructure.
Hill said on Tuesday said he could not speak for the North Koreans but that he felt they seemed receptive. "I think we're on the same ballpark," he said.
North Korea's official Workers' Party newspaper, Rodong Sinmun, said the United States must remove "all nuclear war equipment" from South Korea, illustrating North Korea's long-held suspicions of US hostile intent.
"The United States must verifiably and objectively prove that it has no nuclear weapons in South Korea and has no intention to attack or invade us with nuclear or conventional weapons, as it said in the September 19 joint statement of the six-party talks," the newspaper said, quoted by the KCNA news agency.
The United States denies keeping nuclear weapons in South Korea.
The US State Department has said that International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) technicians who arrived in North Korea over the weekend had verified the shutdown of the Yongbyon reactor and expected to verify the status of four other nuclear facilities, including a spent fuel reprocessing plant, by Wednesday.
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