PYONGYANG, North Korea - UN nuclear monitors said Friday they were able
to see all the facilities they wanted on their visit to the plutonium-producing
reactor that North Korea has pledged to shut down in return for aid.
International Atomic Energy Agency Director General Olli
Heinonen, left, is welcomed by Ri Je-son, right, director general of North
Korea's General Department of Atomic Energy upon arrival in Pyongyang by
air Tuesday, June 26, 2007. [AP]
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The team from the International
Atomic Energy Agency returned Friday to the North Korean capital from a two-day
trip to the Yongbyon nuclear complex, saying the reactor was still operating but
that the monitors were satisfied with the visit, broadcaster APTN reported.
"We visited all the places which we were planning to," IAEA Deputy Director
Olli Heinonen said in footage shot by APTN, adding that "the cooperation was
excellent and now we continue the meetings still in Pyongyang now."
The 5-megawatt Yongbyon reactor is at the center of international efforts to
halt North Korea's nuclear program.
The IAEA's five-day trip to North Korea through Saturday is aimed at
discussing details of how to verify that Pyongyang shuts down the reactor as
promised in a February accord following six-party talks with the US, China,
Japan, Russia and South Korea.
Movement on the back was delayed for months by a recently resolved financial
dispute between North Korea and the United States.
Heinonen had said on Thursday that the two-day trip to Yongbyon - the first
IAEA visit there since UN monitors were expelled from North Korea in 2002 -
could give a better indication of when North Korea would shut the reactor down.
"We are here to negotiate the arrangements, so let's see now when we get to
Friday evening what we have on the table," Heinonen said in footage broadcast by
APTN in Pyongyang before he departed for the Yongbyon reactor.
In Washington, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Thursday she hoped
for a swift shutdown.
"We hope for now rapid progress given the beginning, we believe, of the North
Korean efforts to meet their initial action obligations," Rice said, before
meeting South Korean Foreign Minister Song Min-soon .
Song told reporters after the meeting that six-party nuclear talks with North
Korea can resume even before the North's reactor closure is completed, as long
as Pyongyang starts the shutdown, Yonhap news agency reported.
The Foreign Ministry in Seoul could not immediately confirm the comments.
Though North Korea pledged to close Yongbyon in exchange for economic aid and
political concessions, it ignored an April deadline to do so because of a
dispute with Washington over North Korean funds frozen in a Macau bank because
US allegations of money laundering and other wrongdoing.
That was finally settled this week after months of delays, and North Korea
said Monday it would move forward with the disarmament deal.
The February agreement's initial phase calls for North Korea to shut the
Yongbyon reactor and receive 50,000 tons heavy fuel oil
assistance.