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US awaits overdue nuclear declaration from N.Korea

US, N Korean envoys meet tomorrow to seek deal where North delivers overdue declaration on its nuclear programmes. -Reuters

Mon, Apr 07, 2008
Reuters

SEOUL - TOP US and North Korean nuclear envoys meet in Singapore on Tuesday to seek a deal in which the secretive North delivers an overdue declaration on its nuclear programmes against a backdrop of stepped-up sabre rattling.

US officials have said they do not expect the actual declaration to come out of the meeting between US Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill and North Korea's Kim Kye Gwan, who last met about a month ago in Geneva.

Mr Hill has said time was running out for the North to make the declaration, which it was supposed to deliver at the end of 2007, and answer US suspicions of having a secret programme to enrich uranium for weapons and proliferating nuclear technology and material to the likes of Syria.

North Korea, which has ratcheted up tensions on the heavily armed Korean peninsula in the past few days with missile tests and threats to reduce the South to ashes, said it had already made the declaration and the US suspicions were 'fictions'.

'Explicitly speaking, the DPRK (North Korea) has never enriched uranium nor rendered nuclear cooperation to any other country. It has never dreamed of such things,' its KCNA news agency on March 28 quoted a Foreign Ministry spokesman as saying.

The North's leader, Kim Jong Il, visited military bases, KCNA reported at the weekend, and expressed satisfaction that his soldiers could 'beat back the enemy's invasion at a single stroke and firmly defend the socialist homeland'.

US officials said they believe North Korea has produced about 50kg of plutonium, or enough for about eight nuclear bombs. Officials close to the nuclear negotiations said the North may be ready to give an inventory of its plutonium but not much else.

Moon Chung In, an expert on North Korea at Yonsei University, said perhaps the best that can be expected from the meeting is a commitment from North Korea to return to the nuclear talks with China, Japan, Russia, South Korea and the US.

If the isolated North makes the declaration, it stands to be removed from a US terrorism blacklist and be better able to tap into international finance that could boost its basket case economy. -- REUTERS

 
 
 
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