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North Korea was expected Monday to start an unprecedented disabling of the nuclear programme it has pursued for half a century, under the supervision of a US team of experts. The communist state's official media gave no information on whether work has started at the Yongbyon complex. But US nuclear envoy Christopher Hill said over the weekend that a US supervisory team was set to begin work by Monday. "This will be, I think, an important moment when it's done," Hill said Saturday in Tokyo. The North, which staged its first nuclear test in October 2006, has agreed with five negotiating partners to declare and disable all its programmes by year-end in return for energy aid and major diplomatic benefits. In July it took the first step by shutting down its plutonium-producing reactor at Yongbyon. Disablement aims to make the reactor and other plants unusable for at least a year while talks on total denuclearisation continue. The North will receive energy aid worth hundreds of millions of dollars in return for disablement. If it goes on next year to dismantle the plants and give up its plutonium stockpile and nuclear weapons, it can expect normalised relations with Washington and a peace pact to replace the armistice which ended the 1950-1953 Korean War. The aim of disablement is to avoid a re-run of what happened in 2002, when a 1994 denuclearisation pact with the United States fell apart. Despite an eight-year shutdown the North quickly resumed production of plutonium and now has an estimated 45-65 kilogrammes (99-143 pounds) -- enough to build several bombs. South Korea's Yonhap news agency, quoting diplomatic sources, said chief nuclear negotiators from the six nations -- the two Koreas, the United States, China, Japan and Russia -- recently agreed 11 disablement measures at the three major plants at Yongbyon. It said these include the withdrawal of about 8,000 spent fuel rods from the five-megawatt reactor, the only one in operation in the country. Yonhap said the removal of the rods, which weigh some 50 tonnes in total, was expected to take at least six weeks. The US team was expected to keep them in a cooling pond until a decision is made on how to dispose of them. A six-nation pact reached in February also envisages the North's eventual removal from a US list of state sponsors of terrorism, and from the provisions of the Trading with the Enemy Act. But Hill said Saturday that Pyongyang would first have to satisfy Washington that it was not engaged in any terrorism-related activities. "They have to address the terrorism concerns that put them on the list in the first place," he said. North Korea's quest for nuclear weapons began after the Korean War, when Washington stationed nuclear warheads in South Korea and Japan. In the mid-1950s, Pyongyang signed a research agreement with Moscow under which hundreds of its scientists were trained in nuclear physics by the Soviets. The North later signed a similar cooperation agreement with China. The US withdrew its nuclear weapons from the Korean peninsula in the early 1990s. More recently, according to US sources, the North turned to Pakistan to develop a separate programme based on highly enriched uranium. Pyongyang has reportedly agreed to account for that programme as well. All rights reserved. © 2005 Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse.
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