UN
nuclear inspectors set to leave for North Korea
By Michael
Adler
AFP
VIENNA
Petroleumworld.com
07 13 07
UN nuclear inspectors left for North Korea on Thursday
to monitor Pyongyang's first steps in shutting down its nuclear weapons programme,
officials said.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) mission starts Saturday in North
Korea after the 10 inspectors stop off in Beijing, said an agency statement.
Nine inspectors left from Vienna and the tenth is coming from another location,
an IAEA spokesman said.
The mission will re-establish international monitoring nearly five years after
Pyongyang threw out IAEA inspectors in December 2002 when the communist state
moved to re-start its Yongbyon plutonium-producing nuclear reactor and resume
weapons work.
"We wish that we will be successful. We are full of energy to do it," the
head of the inspection team Adel Tolba told AFP, saying the mission was "to
prepare and monitor the shutdown of nuclear facilities."
North Korea conducted its first nuclear test in October last year. It is believed
to have several plutonium bombs.
North Korea agreed to shut down Yongbyon in a February 13 accord reached with
five international powers, which secures fuel supplies for Pyongyang in a first
step towards ending its nuclear weapons efforts.
The IAEA inspectors "will implement arrangements agreed between the IAEA
and the DPRK (North Korea) and approved by the Agency's Board of Governors to
undertake verification and monitoring of the shutdown and sealing of DPRK's Yongbyong
nuclear facilities," the IAEA statement said.
The IAEA team took with it about 100 cases of equipment weighing about one tonne,
an IAEA spokesman said.
The IAEA's 35 nation board of governors had approved the mission on Monday.
The spokesman said the inspectors would arrive in Beijing Friday morning and
leave for Pyongyang on Saturday morning.
The inspectors could not leave until North Korea made a formal invitation which
arrived Tuesday, a move that shows Pyongyang moving quickly at this point to
meet its obligations, diplomats said.
The larger negotiating process is also proceeding. Six-nation talks on North
Korea's nuclear programme are to resume next week, China's foreign ministry said.
Meanwhile, a South Korean tanker left Thursday with a first shipment of fuel
oil for North Korea.
IAEA head Mohamed ElBaradei told reporters in Seoul that he expected the shutdown
to start early next week and to go smoothly.
The UN atomic chief said it was "a good step in the right direction" but
warned that full denuclearisation is "going to be a long process. We should
not delude ourselves.
This has been a problem for over 15 years, the Korean nuclear
issue, and it will take time to have a comprehensive solution."
Under the February 13 agreement, the energy-starved North will receive one million
tons of fuel oil or equivalent aid, plus major diplomatic benefits and security
guarantees, if it declares and dismantles all nuclear programmes.
"The key thing here is not simply getting this first stage agreement completed
but then continuing on with disabling and ultimately dismantling of the North
Korean nuclear program," US State Department deputy spokesman Tom Casey
said last week in Washington.
AFP 12 1912 GMT 07 07
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