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Seoul wants 'smooth' NKorea nuclear disablement![]() NKorea nuclear disablement to start on Monday: US envoy A team of US atomic inspectors is due to begin work overseeing the disablement of North Korea's nuclear facilities on Monday, US envoy Christopher Hill said Saturday. The nine-member US team arrived in the North Korean capital Pyongyang on Friday and expects to go to the main Yongbyon atomic reactor on Sunday to supervise the disablement work. "They are in Pyongyang and tomorrow will be going to Yongbyon, the site of the nuclear installation, and they will begin the process of disabling the DPRK (North Korean) plutonium production facilities in Yongbyon," said Hill. "This will be, I think, an important moment when it's done. They'll be going to Yongbyon tomorrow (Sunday) and by Monday they will begin their work," added Hill, an assistant secretary of state and chief US envoy to six-nation talks on denuclearising the North. North Korea, which tested an atomic weapon in October 2006, has agreed to start disabling its plutonium-producing plants under a six-nation accord which also requires it to declare all nuclear programmes. Under the February accord the North will receive energy aid worth hundreds of millions of dollars for disablement. |
"At this point, participants in the six-party talks give priority to the smooth fulfilment of duties aimed at disabling nuclear facilities by the end of this year," Song told reporters before heading to Canada and the United States.
"It should proceed steadily, as obstacles could surface anytime," he was quoted by Yonhap news agency as saying.
Under a six-nation deal including the two Koreas, China, the United States, Russia and Japan, the North has promised to disable the key facilities at its Yongbyon complex and declare all of its nuclear programmes by year's end.
The North will in exchange receive energy aid worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
Pyongyang has already shut down its Yongbyon plants, and some heavy fuel oil has in return been shipped to the energy-starved state.
A nine-member team of US experts is to start disabling work at Yongbyon beginning Monday, chief US envoy Christopher Hill said Saturday.
North Korea tested its first atomic weapon in October 2006.
If the North goes on next year to dismantle the plants and give up its plutonium and weapons, it can expect normalised relations with Washington and a peace pact to replace the armistice which ended the 1950-1953 Korean War.
North Korea also wants to be taken off a US list of state sponsors of terrorism, but Hill said Pyongyang would first have to satisfy Washington that it was not engaged in any terrorism-related activities.
Song is to meet his Canadian counterpart Maxime Bernier in Ottawa Tuesday before holding talks with US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in Washington on Wednesday, according to Seoul officials.
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