North Korea 'committed' to nuclear disarmament agreement

UN/KOREA: North Korea is committed to a disarmament agreement reached in February but wants sanctions against it lifted first…

UN/KOREA:North Korea is committed to a disarmament agreement reached in February but wants sanctions against it lifted first, the head of the UN nuclear watchdog said yesterday.

It was the International Atomic Energy Agency's (IAEA) first negotiations with North Korea in more than four years, even though IAEA head Mohamed ElBaradei was told the North's top nuclear negotiator was too busy to meet him. Mr ElBaradei said the visit had been "quite useful" and opened the way to a normal relationship. He said North Korea was positive about returning to IAEA membership, but wanted sanctions lifted.

"I think they were very clear that they are willing to implement the February 13th agreement once the other parties implement their part," he said, referring to an agreement reached at six-party talks grouping the two Koreas, Russia, Japan, the US and host China.

"The DPRK [North Korea] mentioned that they are waiting for the lifting of sanctions with regard to the Macau bank." Referring to the closure of the Yongbyon nuclear plant, he said: "They said they are ready, willing and capable of doing that as soon as the financial sanctions are lifted."

READ MORE

Mr ElBaradei's visit was the first by the agency since late 2002, when North Korea expelled its inspectors as an earlier disarmament deal fell apart. It withdrew from the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty days later. Under the terms of the February agreement, the Yongbyon reactor, which makes plutonium that can be used in nuclear weapons, must be shut by mid-April in return for an initial shipment of heavy fuel oil.

However, South Korean foreign minister Song Min-soon said earlier that North Korea had shown no signs of closing the reactor. North Korea tested its first nuclear device last October, drawing widespread condemnation and UN sanctions.

"There is no indication of a change in the operational condition of Yongbyon," Mr Song told a news conference in Seoul. The IAEA, which is trying to iron out the details of a return of its inspectors to North Korea, will be key to verifying whether the state makes good on its pledge.

In addition to US envoy Christopher Hill, South Korean envoy Chun Yung-woo arrived for working-group meetings. Both envoys, along with China's Wu Dawei, will take part in discussions to flesh out parts of the agreement dealing with disarmament and energy. The US said that within 30 days of the February deal it would settle a dispute over North Korean bank accounts frozen in Macau, which the US says were used to launder illegal earnings.

"The Macau issue will be resolved as we've promised," Mr Hill said. As part of the give-and-take to settle the dispute, the US Treasury Department would bar US banks from doing business with the Macau bank, allowing Macau authorities to decide whether to release some of the frozen accounts. But releasing the funds could take weeks and the US restrictions will hinder the North's access to the international financial system. Western diplomats said they expected no immediate progress and warned the process of establishing relations with the IAEA or bringing back inspectors into North Korea would need time.

"North Korea wants to show that they are in the driving seat. They want to drive home the point that they are on eye level when it comes to these negotiations," one diplomat in Vienna said. - ( Reuters )