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Expelled UN inspectors leave N
Korea
Pyongyang - Expelled
UN nuclear inspectors today left North Korea, giving it the
opportunity to resume a mothballed plutonium programme. The inspectors
arrived in China as one of North Korea's senior officials blamed the
US for Pyongyang being unable to fulfil its obligations under the
nuclear non-proliferation treaty.
Pak Ui Chun, North Korea's ambassador
to Moscow, said Washington had itself violated the pact by
"threatening us with a preventative nuclear strike", the
Russian Interfax news agency reported.
"In these circumstances, we also
cannot fulfil the non-proliferation treaty, the basic clause of which
is the obligation of nuclear states not to use the nuclear weapon
against states which do not possess it," he said.
The non-proliferation treaty, which
North Korea signed in 1985, is designed to stop the spread of nuclear
weapons and technology. It said at the weekend that it might withdraw
from the pact, a move that would deepen concern over its nuclear
intentions.
North Korea previously pulled out of
the treaty in 1993 to stop inspectors visiting its Yongbyon nuclear
facilities, precipitating an international crisis that ended 18 months
later when Pyongyang made a deal with the Clinton administration to
freeze work at the plant in return for energy sources.
UN inspectors today arrived in Bejing
after being expelled from North Korea. They had been placed at
Yongbyon to make sure it would not be reactivated, and that spent
plutononium from its reactor would not be siphoned off into a weapons
programme.
The two monitors - a Lebanese man and
a Chinese woman - emerged from the arrival hall at Beijing airport
after flying in from Pyongyang. They refused to discuss the North
Korean situation, saying they were on their way to the headquarters of
the International Atomic Energy Agency, the UN's nuclear watchdog, in
Vienna.
North Korea ordered the expulsion of
the two UN monitors on Friday. In recent weeks, it has also cut UN
seals and impeded surveillance equipment at the reactor and its spent
fuel pond after it announced it would reactivate the mothballed plant
to produce electricity because Washington had halted promised energy
sources.
An oil embargo was imposed by the US
last month after a North Korean official admitted in October that his
country had been covertly developing nuclear weapons using enriched
uranium.
With the departure of the inspectors,
satellites are the only available tools to monitor the isolated
state's nuclear programme, a South Korea foreign ministry official
said today.
Seoul has expressed alarm at the
developments, but insists dialogue is the only way to resolve the
problem peacefully. President-elect Roh Moo-hyun has requested that
the US consult South Korea, a close ally, before formulating a new
approach in its policy to Pyongyang.
"Success or failure of a US
policy toward North Korea isn't too big a deal to the American people,
but it is a life-or-death matter for South Koreans," he said.
"Therefore, any US move should fully consider South Korea's
opinion."
Withdrawal from the non-proliferation
treaty would mean Pyonyang is intent on raising pressure on the US to
negotiate over energy sources. But leaving the treaty could be a
largely symbolic gesture, as US officials believe North Korea already
has one or two nuclear bombs. -- Guardian News
Brudirect.com
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