Deal
agreed to shut key NKorea nuclear facilities
AFP
By
Jun Kwanwoo and Shigemi Sato
AFP
BEIJING
Petroleumworld.com 02 14 06
North Korea agreed Tuesday to shut down key nuclear facilities within
two months in exchange for badly needed fuel, part of a broad agreement
aimed at ending the regime's controversial nuclear programme.
In return, the United States would hold direct talks on diplomatic
relations with North Korea -- a member of US President George W. Bush's
"axis of evil -- and begin looking at removing it from the US
list of terrorist nations.
The deal came after nearly a week of gruelling six-nation talks in
Beijing aimed at convincing the secretive Stalinist state, which tested
an atomic bomb for the first time in October, to abandon its nuclear
weapons.
Chinese negotiator Wu Dawei said an "important consensus"
had been reached at the talks, which would resume in Beijing on March
19 to verify that the deal is being properly implemented.
"It marks an important and solid step for the six-party talks
and a nuclear-free Korean peninsula," Wu told reporters. "This
progress has made the talks a success."
Under the deal, North Korea would have 60 days to shut down its main
Yongbyon nuclear reactor and allow United Nations nuclear inspectors
back into the country.
Meanwhile, the energy-starved regime would receive a first tranche
of 50,000 tonnes of fuel oil -- part of an eventual one million tonnes
if the accord progresses as spelt out and the North permanently disables
its key nuclear facilities.
Chief US envoy Christopher Hill said he was pleased with the outcome
but warned there was stil a long way to go before the end goal of
a denuclearised North Korea was achieved.
"This is only the end of the beginning of the process. We have
a lot of work to do," he told reporters.
Previously, North Korea agreed at six-way talks in September 2005
to scrap its atomic plans but then boycotted the negotiations for
over a year, and still earlier agreements foundered on disputes between
Washington and Pyongyang.
South Korea, the United States, China, Russia and Japan have been
holding nearly four years of on-again, off-again talks with the North,
one of the poorest and most isolated nations in the world.
In 2002, President Bush lumped North Korea in with Iran and pre-war
Iraq as an "axis of evil" linked to the proliferation of
weapons of mass destruction -- while the North has repeatedly condemned
Washington's "hostile policy".
But with the new deal, the two countries will "start bilateral
talks aimed at resolving pending bilateral issues and moving toward
full diplomatic relations," the joint statement said.
Removing the North from the US list of terrorist sponsors could also
clear the way for US firms to do business with North Korea.
According to the new agreement, North Korea would "shut down
and seal for the purpose of eventual abandonment" its main Yongbyon
nuclear plant and make an accounting of all its nuclear programmes
and capabilities.
Included in that list would be plutonium already extracted from fuel
rods, which outside analysts have estimated would be enough for the
North to make several nuclear weapons.
But the public announcement made no mention of previous US allegations
that the North was secretly enriching uranium -- a charge that led
to the breakdown of a previous agreement to help Pyongyang build nuclear
reactors for energy.
North Korea had repeatedly said it would not make concessions until
the United States ended financial sanctions aimed at blocking its
access to the international banking system.
There was also no mention of those unilateral sanctions in the joint
deal, but Hill told reporters afterwards that United States now intended
to resolve the dispute within 30 days.
The joint announcement did say that North Korea would address another
tricky bilateral dispute -- its abductions of Japanese nationals in
the 1970s.
But within an hour of the announcement, Japanese Foreign Minister
Taro Aso said his country would not provide energy aid until "progress"
was made on the abductions issue. Japan believes the North is still
holding some of its people.
AFP
13 1222 GMT 02 07
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