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North Korea Blames US For Impasse In Nuclear Talks

Disgraced Pakistan nuclear scientist hospitalised: army
Disgraced Pakistani nuclear scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan, who underwent cancer surgery two years ago, has been hospitalised with a suspected infection, the army said on Wednesday. Khan, the father of Pakistan's nuclear weapons programme, has been under house arrest since early 2004 when he confessed to passing atomic secrets to Iran, North Korea and Libya. An army statement said Khan had been in good health since he was diagnosed with prostate cancer in September 2006 but that on Tuesday "he complained of weakness and was provided immediate medical treatment at home." "Medical check-up revealed low blood pressure and fever, probably due to some infection. Doctors advised him to be hospitalised for a detailed medical checkup," the statement said. The 71-year-old scientist -- known here as A.Q. Khan -- was taken to hospital early on Wednesday and was being cared for by the team of doctors who treated him earlier. "Doctors who are treating him are hopeful that Dr A.Q. Khan would return home fully recovered in a couple of days," the statement said, adding that the public would be kept informed "periodically" about his health. Khan fell from grace after he publicly confessed in February 2004 to proliferating nuclear secrets. He was immediately pardoned by President Pervez Musharraf. But while not officially under detention, Khan has since been forbidden from leaving his house in an upscale area of the capital Islamabad. Musharraf has refused to allow international investigators to question Khan on the extent of his proliferation activities, saying that Pakistani authorities are capable of the task.
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) March 5, 2008
North Korea Wednesday blamed the United States for the deadlock in a nuclear disarmament agreement, saying Washington has carried out "zero percent" of its side of the deal.

North Korea will not hurry in implementing the six-nation deal, said Rodong Shinmun, newspaper of the ruling communist Workers' Party.

In a commentary it accused Washington of bad faith, especially the failure to start removing the North from a list of state sponsors of terrorism.

Pyongyang would take "ultra hawkish" countermeasures unless Washington abandons its hardline policy, it warned without elaborating in the commentary carried by the Korean Central News Agency.

North Korea last year signed the breakthrough deal to abandon its nuclear weapons in exchange for badly needed aid and major security and diplomatic benefits.

But the process is at an impasse while awaiting a North Korean declaration of all its nuclear programmes, which was promised by the end of last year.

Pyongyang has said it submitted a full list in November. But the US insists it is still waiting for a complete declaration, including a full account of a suspected covert uranium enrichment programme and any proliferation moves.

The commentary also noted that the North has received only part of the fuel oil or equivalent energy aid promised in return for denuclearisation.

"Reality is like this. For what reason should we hurry up while the principle of action for action is not kept?" it said.

The commentary also denied suggestions that the North is dragging its feet while awaiting a new US president.

"We don't care as to who will become the next US president. It's ridiculous and a fable that US hardline conservative forces mislead public opinion to look as if we anticipate something from the next US president," the paper said.

But it cautioned that "everything will come to nothing" if the next US administration adopts a tough policy.

US State Department deputy spokesman Tom Casey said Tuesday that Washington is hopeful that North Korea will hand over a complete declaration in "the not too distant future."

He said US negotiator Christopher Hill had some good meetings recently with his Chinese partners in the six-party talks which also group the two Koreas, Russia and Japan.

Hill said in Hanoi Monday he hoped the talks could resume this month.

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Rice urges China to use maximum influence on North Korea
Beijing (AFP) Feb 26, 2008
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on Tuesday urged China to use all its influence with North Korea to ensure the reclusive Stalinist state moved ahead quickly with nuclear disarmament.







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