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Nuclear Talks Break Down as Pyongyang's Delegate Leaves Beijing


22 March 2007

North Korea's chief nuclear negotiator has left Beijing, effectively halting the latest round of talks on disarming his country's nuclear programs. North Korea refused to attend meetings this week until millions of dollars of its money is transferred out of a Macau bank. Daniel Schearf reports from Beijing.

Negotiations to end North Korea's nuclear programs ground to a halt Thursday in Beijing after Pyongyang's head negotiator Kim Kye-Kwan left for home.

Kim Kye Gwan arrives at VIP section of Beijing airport, 22 Mar. 2007
Kim Kye Gwan arrives at VIP section of Beijing airport, 22 Mar 2007
Kim's departure ends a week of meetings in which North Korea refused to discuss detailed steps to dismantle its nuclear facilities until it received about $25 million from a bank in the Chinese territory of Macau.

Chief U.S. envoy Christopher Hill Thursday expressed frustration at the delay.

"This issue of transferring the accounts has taken up a lot more time than anyone expected," he explained. "So, I think we do have more work, too, and whether we get it done in the next day or two here or have to reconvene at a later date I can't tell you at this point. I hope to get some answers in that regard with the Chinese."

Hill says it is time to get on with talks on implementing a February deal where North Korea promised to close its main nuclear reactor and plutonium factory and let inspectors into the country in exchange for aid and diplomatic incentives.

The Macau authorities froze the North Korean accounts in 2005 after the U.S. accused Banco Delta Asia of helping Pyongyang launder dirty money from counterfeiting and other illegal activities.

Last week, the U.S. Treasury Department banned U.S. banks from doing business with the bank. The nations involved then agreed North Korea could have the money back after it promised to use it for domestic aid projects.

China's Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao Thursday says the money transfer is being held up by "technical" and "procedural" problems, but would not elaborate.

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