Text Only
Search

 
US Envoy Warns More Work Ahead in Effort to End N. Korea's Nuclear Programs


15 July 2007
Dawson report (mp3) - Download 435k audio clip
Listen to Dawson report (mp3) audio clip

North Korea says it has shut down its main nuclear reactor, more than four years after the facility was re-opened. As VOA's Kate Pound Dawson reports from our Asia News Center, a top U.S. diplomat says that is a good first step, but there is more work ahead.

Pyongyang's declaration that it had shut down the Yongbyon reactor came as United Nations inspectors were arriving to examine the facility.

The team from the International Atomic Energy Agency will spend weeks making sure all of the facility is closed, and setting up monitoring equipment to ensure it is not restarted.

Christopher Hill (File)
Christopher Hill 
Assistant U.S. Secretary of State Christopher Hill on Sunday welcomed the news of the shutdown. But he cautioned that more work is needed to end North Korea's nuclear weapons programs.

"We realize how long it took, how long it took, to get here. … I think we have to really work very hard for the additional steps that are necessary," Hill said.

Hill is the lead U.S. negotiator in six-nation talks on ending Pyongyang's nuclear ambitions. He spoke in Tokyo at the end of a visit to prepare for talks this week.

The IAEA visit is the first since the end of 2002, when North Korea abandoned the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, kicked the agency's staff out of the country and restarted the reactor. It did so after the United States said Pyongyang had resumed efforts to build nuclear weapons, despite several international pledges not to.

Since then, the United States, China, Japan, South Korea and Russia have tried to persuade North Korea to abandon its nuclear programs. Those efforts made little progress until this year, and Pyongyang tested a nuclear explosive device last year.

In February, however, North Korea promised to shut down its nuclear facilities in return for energy aid and diplomatic benefits. On Saturday, the first batch of energy aid - more than six thousand tons of fuel oil from South Korea arrived in the impoverished North.

On Wednesday, negotiators from the six nations meet in Beijing to plan the next steps in North Korea's disarmament process.

 

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
UN Inspectors Ready to Verify Shutdown of North Korea's Reactor
UN Nuclear Inspectors in North Korea to Verify Reactor Shutdown
 
  Top Story
Obama Pays Tribute to Fort Hood Shooting Victims

  More Stories
Bomb Rocks Northwestern Pakistan
China Ready to Welcome President Obama  Video clip available
US Urges North Korea Not to Escalate Tensions in Yellow Sea
British PM Defends Military Mission in Afghanistan  Audio Clip Available
Lebanon's Unity Government Convenes for First Time
Tropical Storm Ida Downgraded; Moves Inland
Report: Africa's Disappearing Wetlands Produce 'Alarming' Levels of Greenhouse Gas
IEA Urges Action on Climate Change
Somali Pirates Deny Arms Seizure  Audio Clip Available
Cross-Examination Begins in War Crimes Trial of Former Liberian President  Audio Clip Available
US Development of H1N1 Vaccine Hits Snag  Video clip available
Asia to Welcome President Obama  Video clip available
Obama Makes First China Tour as Economic Interdependence Grows  Audio Clip Available  Video clip available
APEC Marks 20 Years, Looks to Future of Regional Trade  Audio Clip Available
Clinton Urges 'Compassion' for Americans Detained in Iran  Audio Clip Available
World War II Museum Expansion Aims at Younger Generations  Audio Clip Available  Video clip available
North Carolina World War II Veterans Honored in Washington  Video clip available