A working group of US experts on Wednesday stopped over in
Beijing en route to the Democratic People's Republic of Korea
(DPRK) to carry out work related to the disabling of the nuclear
facilities.
The team, led by Sung Kim, director of the US State Department's
Office of Korea Affairs, is scheduled to arrive in Pyongyang on
Thursday. The officials will work to create a plan for future teams
to begin disabling the Yongbyon nuclear reactor.
As a first step, the US expert group would stay in the DPRK for
about a week before another team took over in a "baton pass,"
according to the State Department.
The DPRK agreed to disable all existing nuclear facilities and
to provide a complete and correct declaration of all its nuclear
programs by the end of this year, according to a joint document
released on October 3 when the second phase of the sixth round of six-party talks ended in
Beijing.
The document said that the disabling of the five-megawatt
Experimental Reactor, the Reprocessing Plant (Radiochemical
Laboratory) and the Nuclear Fuel Rod Fabrication Facility in
Yongbyon would be completed by December 31.
The United States would lead the disablement and provide initial
funding, according to the document.
The six parties -- China, the DPRK, the United States, the ROK
(Republic of Korea), Russia and Japan -- signed a landmark
agreement on February 13 that required the DPRK to declare all
nuclear programs and disable all existing nuclear facilities, while
the other parties must provide a total of 1 million tons of heavy
fuel oil or equivalent aid to the DPRK.
The work on the next phase of the six-party talks "will be
decided through consultation among the involved parties", Chinese
Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said on Tuesday.
(Xinhua News Agency October 10, 2007)