The top US negotiator on North Korea's nuclear program said
Monday that it was becoming difficult for Pyongyang to meet a
mid-April deadline to close a nuclear reactor, but Washington would
not accept a partial shutdown.
Speaking to reporters in Tokyo, Assistant Secretary of State
Christopher Hill urged Pyongyang to take agreed steps towards
denuclearization regardless of a dispute over the transfer of
frozen funds to North Korea.
"Clearly we are aiming for a complete fulfillment of the
February agreement and we'd like to get it done by day 60," Hill
said, referring to a February 13 agreement that gave the North 60
days to shut its nuclear facilities in return for energy aid.
"But obviously that timeline is becoming difficult, but
certainly there is no such thing as partial," added Hill, when
asked if a partial shutdown of the reactor would be acceptable.
Hill met Japanese officials later Monday. He is due to visit the
Republic of Korea and China for more talks on the nuclear
issue.
North Korea walked out of Six-Party Talks aimed at ending its
nuclear weapons program last month when the transfer of US$25
million in funds held at Banco Delta Asia (BDA) in Macao failed to
go through.
But Japan's top government spokesman said the fund dispute
should not hold up implementation of the February agreement among
the two Koreas, the United States, Japan, China and Russia.
Richardson in Pyongyang
New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson, who heads a delegation of
US lawmakers currently visiting Pyongyang, said separately he
believed the North was ready to end its nuclear weapons program and
improve relations with Washington.
"I believe for the first time they do want to enter into an
agreement with the six-party countries and they want a better
relationship with the United States," Richardson, a Democratic
presidential candidate who also visited North Korea in the 1990s
and in 2005, told US broadcaster NBC.
"They know that the key is dismantling their nuclear
weapons."
North Korea's top nuclear negotiator told Richardson Monday that
his government would immediately invite UN nuclear inspectors into
the country if the US$25 million funds are released.
North Korean Vice-Foreign Minister Kim Kye-gwan met with
Richardson and Anthony Principi, US President George W. Bush's
former veteran affairs secretary, in Pyongyang Monday.
Kim "indicated that the North Korean government would invite
the... inspectors back the moment the funds are released to the
North Korean government," Principi told reporters after the
meeting.
Kim also told the US delegation that it would be difficult to
shut down the country's main nuclear reactor by a Saturday deadline
called for in a February nuclear disarmament accord, he said.
"They can make a beginning, but whether they can completely shut
down a nuclear reactor in such a short time would be very
difficult," Principi said.
(China Daily via agencies April 10, 2007)