US
envoy uncertain on NKorea deadline
By
Hiroshi Hiyama
AFP
TOKYO
Petroleumworld.com
04 10 07
The US point man on North Korea said Monday it was
uncertain whether a banking row could be resolved in time to meet this week's
deadline in a breakthrough aid-for-disarmament deal.
Envoy Christopher Hill started a three-nation regional tour amid intense US diplomacy
ahead of Saturday's deadline, which Japan and China have both publicly doubted
can be met.
North Korea pledged in a six-nation deal in February to shut down its key Yongbyon
nuclear facility and allow the return of UN nuclear inspectors by April 14 in
return for badly needed fuel aid.
But the communist state has refused to move until it receives 25 million dollars
of its money which was unfrozen from a Macau bank but has taken time to work
its way to Pyongyang.
Despite efforts by US Treasury officials to iron out what they called "technical,
banking issues," Hill declined to predict whether a breakthrough can be
reached.
"It is hard to say. We have really worked hard with Macau authorities, with
the Beijing government, also with the DPRK (North Korea)," Hill told reporters
after meeting with his Japanese counterpart Kenichiro Sasae.
"I think we have a way forward. We have to see if it will work. We will
know in the next couple of days how we do on that," he said.
Asked whether he saw a need to push back the original deadline, Hill said: "We
want to keep that plan intact. But we have to see if we can get through this
financial issue."
Under the agreement reached after painstaking negotiations, North Korea has to
shut down and seal its nuclear reactor and other facilities at Yongbyon by April
14 and invite in UN inspectors in exchange for an initial 50,000 tonnes of fuel
oil.
But Pyongyang has insisted on first seeing the money from the Macau-based Banco
Delta Asia, which was frozen on US charges the account was linked to money-laundering
and counterfeiting.
North Korea boycotted the six-nation talks for 10 months over the issue during
which it tested an atom bomb.
An official from China, North Korea's main ally, played down the significance
of the deadline.
" I don't think there is any change in the overall framework or direction.
The six parties have all agreed on the first steps," Chinese Ambassador
to Japan Wang Yi told reporters after a meeting with Prime Minister Shinzo
Abe.
" We are running out of time due to technical reasons over the financial
issue. I think the US and North Korea are making efforts to seek a resolution
to this matter," Wang said.
US President George W. Bush's administration has promoted the North Korea deal
as a foreign policy success at a time of growing public dissatisfaction over
Iraq.
As Hill started his visit to Tokyo, Seoul and Beijing, a bi-partisan team headed
by former UN ambassador Bill Richardson was holding talks in Pyongyang, officially
to recover the remains of US soldiers killed in the Korean War.
Hill said the fundamental problem remained not the banking, but North Korea's
nuclear drive.
" The problem has been that because North Korea has been engaged in weapons
programmes and engaged in financing these programmes that we have this problem
of moving finances through the international financial system," Hill said
after arriving at Narita airport near Tokyo.
" Frankly, I think the North Koreans would find the international financial
system a lot more hospitable if they were not making weapons of mass destruction," he
said.
The six-way talks group host China, Japan, the two Koreas, Russia and the United
States.
AFP 09 1215 GMT 04 07
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