WORLD / Asia-Pacific
N.Korea insists US unfreeze $25m
(AP)
Updated: 2007-03-17 11:39
BEIJING - North Korea will not stop its nuclear activity unless $25
million of its funds held in a Macau bank are fully released, the DPRK's
top nuclear envoy said Saturday.
North Korea's negotiator for the six-party talks Kim Kye-gwan speaks to
the media after arriving in Beijing's airport in this February 8, 2007,
file photo. [Reuters]
Banco Delta Asia had been blacklisted by Washington since September 2005
for its complicity in North Korean money laundering.
Earlier this week, the US Treasury Department ended its investigation
into the small Macau lender and said that ties would be cut with the bank
and the US financial system. The move might lead regulators to unfreeze a
portion of the money.
Issuing DPRK's first official response to the US decision, Kim Gye Gwan
said Saturday in Beijing that his country has not heard anything
officially about the lifting of financial sanctions.
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"We will not stop our nuclear activity until our funds frozen in the BDA
are fully released," he said. "We will not stop the Yongbyon nuclear
facility until the United States fully releases our funds frozen in the
BDA."
Christopher Hill, the chief American nuclear negotiator, said earlier
Saturday that he planned to brief Kim on the issue in working groups.
"I don't think BDA will be an obstacle," he said before meeting Kim. "I
think we'll work that out."
Washington had promised to resolve the issue as part of the
implementation of a landmark Feb. 13 agreement under which North Korea
agreed to shut down Yongbyon, its main nuclear reactor and processing
facility, and allow UN inspectors for verification by April 14.
In return, North Korea would receive energy and economic assistance and a
start toward normalizing relations with the US and Japan.
Hill also said the US plans to raise the issue of North Korea's alleged
uranium enrichment program when six-nation talks on ridding Pyongyang of
its nuclear weapons resume Monday.
US allegations that North Korea has a uranium enrichment program brought
on the nuclear crisis in 2002 that led the country to kick out UN
inspectors and ultimately contributed to North Korea testing its first
nuclear bomb last year.
North Korea has never publicly acknowledged that it has such a program.
Washington will also discuss benchmarks for progress in Pyongyang's
de-nuclearization efforts, Hill said.
North Korea would be rewarded for meeting those benchmarks with
deliveries of heavy fuel oil agreed to under a landmark Feb. 13
agreement, he said.
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