Wednesday, August 15, 2007

UN cameras set up at N.Korea atom complex - diplomat


A satellite image taken September 11, 2005, of the five-megawatt reactor site at Yongbyon nuclear facility in North Korea. U.N. monitors have set up surveillance cameras needed to help verify a continued shutdown of N.Korea's nuclear weapons programme, a diplomat close to the IAEA said on Thursday. REUTERS/DigitalGlobe-ISIS


UN cameras set up at N.Korea atom complex - diplomat
Thu Aug 9, 2007 10:50PM IST

By Mark Heinrich

VIENNA (Reuters) - U.N. monitors have set up surveillance cameras needed to help verify a continued shutdown of North Korea's nuclear weapons programme, a diplomat close to the International Atomic Energy Agency said on Thursday.
Half-a-dozen IAEA monitors will exit the Stalinist state this weekend after completing the installation of cameras and be replaced by a smaller team of two to keep watch, the diplomat said in Vienna, where the U.N. agency is based.
"It will be an ongoing verification process now, a regular rotation of monitors with cameras and seals on the equipment, minding the store. We're not aware of any difficulties."
An initial team of 10 IAEA monitors confirmed last month that Pyongyang had shut its Yongbyon nuclear complex, the source of weapons-grade plutonium used in a nuclear test explosion last October that shocked the world.
North Korea had expelled IAEA inspectors in 2002 after a 1994 disarmament deal fell apart.
Last February, Pyongyang agreed with five powers to mothball its nuclear infrastructure in return for a first instalment in massive energy aid to the impoverished state. The five are the United States, South Korea, Japan, China and Russia.
But they face an uphill battle in planned negotiations to get paranoid North Korea to carry out full nuclear disarmament by disabling its atomic facilities, accounting for all its nuclear devices and materials and doing away with them.
The United States said on Monday there could be a ministerial meeting as early as September between North Korea and four other countries to advance the disarmament process.
But a potential stumbling block to the disarmament-for-aid deal arose on Wednesday when North Korea called on regional powers to give it 50,000 tonnes of heavy fuel oil a month.

© Reuters 2007.

=====================================

Second IAEA team arrives in Pyongyang
Posted July 28th, 2007 by Tarique

By Xinhua

Pyongyang : A second team of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) arrived in the North Korean capital Saturday to continue the inspection on nuclear facilities at Yongbyon.
Ryszard Zarucki, head of the six-member IAEA team, said on arrival that they would continue monitoring and verification at Yongbyon, 90 km north of Pyongyang.
Zarucki also said they would exchange views with the first IAEA team at Pyongyang for a couple of days before the team took over part of the work. Then, they would go to Yongbyon directly.
In mid-July, North Korea said it had shut down its Yongbyon nuclear facilities after it had received the first shipment of heavy oil from South Korea to be used as fuel for its power plants. The shutdown had been confirmed by the IAEA later.
The first IAEA team was dispatched to North Korea earlier this month and would leave Tuesday.

No comments: