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标题[新闻] 美国派遣使团赴北京谈北韩核子问题
时间Sat Sep 6 13:16:05 2008
标题:US nuclear envoy to discuss North Korea impasse
By HENRY SANDERSON – 18 hours ago
BEIJING (AP) — The top American nuclear envoy arrived in Beijing on Friday
for talks on North Korea's nuclear programs as Pyongyang took steps seen as
reversing its promised disarmament.
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill was to attend discussions
with his Japanese and South Korean counterparts before meeting with host
China's representative, Wu Dawei, on Saturday, said Richard Buangan, a
spokesman from the U.S. Embassy in Beijing.
It was not immediately clear if any meetings were scheduled with the North
Koreans.
The North began moving disassembled parts of its main nuclear reactor back to
the plutonium-producing facility this week, putting into action a threat it
would restore atomic facilities that had been partially disabled under a
disarmament pact, South Korea said Wednesday.
Pyongyang says that the United States has not held up its end of their
disarmament deal — a promise to remove North Korea from the U.S. list of
state sponsors of terrorism. Washington says it will take the North off the
list only after it complies with a disarmament requirement.
South Korea's chief nuclear negotiator, Kim Sook, said before leaving for
Beijing he has no information on whether North Korea's nuclear negotiator,
Kim Kye Gwan, would be in the Chinese capital. The U.S. and North Korean
negotiators have sometimes met in Beijing in the past when their negotiations
were deadlocked.
"I'm going to meet my counterparts from the United States, China and Japan to
establish a joint view of the current situation and discuss ways to deal with
it," Kim told reporters. "I hope the impasse will be broken at an early date
and North Korea will resume" disarmament steps, he said.
The United States has played down the latest North Korean move, saying
Pyongyang just moved some equipment out of storage and it has not yet started
to "reconstruct, reintegrate this equipment back into the facility."
Kim said he did not have information on whether Pyongyang had done anything
more to undo its disarmament steps, beyond moving equipment out of storage
and placing it near the atomic reactor at its Yongbyon plant.
The U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency has said it would take some time
for North Korea to restore the facilities to an operational state because the
country had already removed "essential" equipment from them.
South Korean and U.S. officials have said it would take at least a year for
North Korea to restart the facilities once they are completely disabled.
The North conducted an underground nuclear test blast in October 2006. It
later agreed with the U.S., China, South Korea, Japan and Russia to disable
the Yongbyon plant in exchange for aid and diplomatic concessions. Work began
in November last year.
There was major progress in June after North Korea submitted the long-delayed
accounting of its nuclear activities and destroyed its nuclear cooling tower
in a show of commitment to denuclearization.
The U.S. then announced it would take North Korea off the terrorism
blacklist, a coveted goal of the North's cash-strapped regime, but said it
must first agree to a verification plan.
Associated Press Writer Jae-Soon Chang in Seoul contributed to this report.
http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jDsrn5qmVUANHrmtASfggyXfhI9gD930GVK80
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