VIENNA - UN inspectors are now set to travel to North Korea and will be
leaving in the "next few days," the International Atomic Energy Agency said
Tuesday, after receiving a formal invitation from Pyongyang.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) chief Mohamed
ElBaradei gives a press conference the IAEA's 35-nation board of governors
meeting at the organization's headquarters in Vienna, 09 July 2007.
[Agencies]
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The IAEA's 35-nation board of
governors had approved Monday sending inspectors back to North Korea for the
first time since 2002 to verify the first steps by Pyongyang in dismantling its
nuclear weapons programme, a process that is expected to be long and difficult.
The inspectors could not leave until North Korea formally invited the IAEA to
send them, and the invitation shows Pyongyang moving quickly at this point to
meet its obligations.
The larger negotiating process is also proceeding. Six-nation talks on
scrapping North Korea's nuclear programme are likely to resume next week, South
Korea said Tuesday.
"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 Tom Casey said in
Washington.
The mission will re-establish international monitoring nearly five years
after the agency was kicked out in December 2002 when Pyongyang moved to
re-start its Yongbyon reactor.
The reclusive, Stalinist state conducted its first nuclear test in October
last year. It is believed to have several plutonium bombs.
North Korea has now agreed to shut down Yongbyon, in a six-party agreement
reached on February 13. The accord, which secures fuel supplies for North Korea,
is a first step towards Pyongyang giving up its nuclear weapons.
The IAEA said in a statement that "following receipt of an invitation today
(Tuesday) from the Democratic People's Republic of Korea an IAEA team will
travel to the DPRK within the next few days."
It did not say exactly when this would be but diplomats have said a
nine-member mission could be leaving Saturday, or possibly as early as Thursday.
Pyongyang is waiting for a shipment of fuel from South Korea as a first
payment in the six-party deal reached with China, Japan, South Korea, Russia and
the United States.
Energy-starved North Korea is getting 50,000 tonnes of oil from South Korea
in return for closing Yongbyon, and the first shipment is due to be sent
Thursday.
The IAEA said its "team will implement arrangements agreed between the IAEA
and the DPRK and approved by the agency's Board of Governors to undertake
verification and monitoring of the shutdown and sealing of DPRK's Yongbyon
nuclear facilities."
IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei had said Monday that "shutting down the
facilities ... should not take much time, probably a few days" but then
surveillance cameras and other equipment would have to be installed.
The site includes the five-megawatt Yongbyon research reactor plus two other
power reactors under construction, a reprocessing plant and a fuel fabrication
plant.
The IAEA board on Monday granted ElBaradei 1.7 million euros (2.3 million
dollars) in 2007 and 2.2 million euros in 2008 for "the monitoring and
verification activities" in North Korea.
ElBaradei said there should be no problem in getting the money, since the
United States has already committed millions of dollars. He said he expected "a
number of countries" to contribute.
Diplomats said the IAEA would be maintaining a "permanent two-person
inspector presence at Yongbyon" once the mission there resumes.
ElBaradei visited North Korea in March to set up IAEA monitoring there but a
banking dispute over millions of dollars blocked by US sanctions delayed the
closing of Yongbyon beyond what was supposed to be an April 13
deadline.