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North Korea wants U.N. sanctions
lifted
By ALEXA OLESEN
Beijing -
North Korea defiantly declared itself a nuclear power Monday
at the start of the first full international arms talks since its
atomic test and threatened to increase its arsenal if its demands
were not met.
Reiterating those demands in its
opening speech, the North said the United Nations must lift the
sanctions imposed on the communist nation for its Oct. 9 nuclear
test. It also said the United States must remove the financial
restrictions that led the North to break off the six-nation
negotiations 13 months ago.
The North also said it wants a
reactor built for it and help covering its energy needs in the
meantime, according to a summary of the speech released by one of
the delegations involved. Five nations are trying to persuade the
North to abandon nuclear weapons — the United States, China, South
Korea, Japan and Russia.
The North said that now that it is
a nuclear power, it should be treated on equal footing with the U.S.
It warned that if its demands were not met, it would increase its
arsenal, according to the summary.
The U.S. offered in its opening
comments to normalize relations with Pyongyang, but only after it
halted its atomic program.
"The supply of our patience may
have exceeded the international demand for that patience, and we
should be a little less patient and pick up the pace and work
faster," Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill, the U.S.
envoy, told reporters.
China, the North's last major ally,
also pushed for results.
Opening the talks at a Chinese
state guesthouse in Beijing, head Chinese delegate Wu Dawei urged
the envoys to work for the implementation of a September 2005
agreement in which the North pledged to abandon its nuclear program
in exchange for security guarantees and aid.
"We have finished the stage of
commitment for commitment and now should follow the principle of
action for action," Foreign Ministry spokesman Jiang Yu said,
echoing phrasing from the earlier agreement.
"The position of the North Korean
delegation is wide apart from the rest of us and we cannot accept
it," Japanese negotiator Kenichiro Sasae told reporters.
A South Korean official who
declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the talks said
the North was entering the negotiations with a maximum of conditions
for success.
North Korea agreed to return to the
six-nation negotiations just weeks after its nuclear test, saying it
wanted to discuss U.S. financial restrictions against a Macau bank
where the regime held accounts.
That issue will be addressed in
separate U.S.-North Korean meetings expected to start Tuesday.
The arms talks have been plagued by
delays and discord since they began in August 2003.
The U.S. has sought to line up
support against Pyongyang's nuclear ambitions by enlisting its
neighbors in the discussions.
The North exploited divisions among
the U.S. and its partners in an effort to change the subject and buy
time to develop its arsenal.
But North Korea's test of a
low-yield nuclear device seemed to stiffen the will of other
countries — particularly China — to persuade it to disarm.
Beijing joined a unanimous U.N.
Security Council resolution sanctioning North Korea, and brought
Pyongyang and Washington together just a few weeks later to agree to
resume discussions.
North Korea had boycotted the talks
in response to the financial restrictions imposed by the United
States. Washington had accused North Korea of using the Macau bank
in scheme to launder money and print counterfeit U.S. currency.
South Korean nuclear negotiator
Chun Yung-woo suggested getting North Korea to dismantle its nuclear
weapons program was a two-way process.
"We urged North Korea to take bold
and substantial initial steps to dismantle its nuclear program and
stressed that the other five countries' corresponding measures
should also be bold and substantial," Chun said.
The latest North Korean nuclear
crisis began in late 2002, when U.S. officials said the North
admitted running a secret nuclear program. The program violated a
1994 deal with the U.S., in which North Korea agreed to halt its
atomic development.
After its admission, North Korea
withdrew from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, expelled
international inspectors and restarted its main nuclear reactor in
order to make plutonium for bombs. -- The
Associated Press
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