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North Korea nuclear report expected Thursday, says US

Mon Jun 23, 2008 10:54pm EDT
BEIJING, June 24 (Reuters) - The United States confirmed on Tuesday that it expects North Korea to hand over a long-awaited declaration of its nuclear activities in two days' time, allowing for the resumption of multilateral disarmament talks.

Japan's Kyodo news agency said North Korea, which defied international warnings and tested a nuclear device in October 2006, would give the report to China, which chairs the talks, by Thursday.

"That's been the target date, as the White House spokeswoman said today," Christopher Hill, the chief U.S. envoy to the talks, told reporters.

White House spokeswoman Dana Perino told a briefing in Washington that Thursday was the date being eyed.

"This is a deadline that the North Koreans themselves have put out there," she said.

Giving over the declaration, which was originally promised by the end of 2007, would set in motion a series of steps that would see the United States begin the process of removing Pyongyang from a list of nations Washington sees as sponsors of terrorism.

It would also bring the resumption of six-party talks that group North and South Korea, the United States, Japan, Russia and host China and are aimed at ending the North's nuclear ambitions.

North Korea has begun dismantling its Yongbyon atomic reactor as part of a deal reached at the talks in which it agreed to give up its nuclear programmes in exchange for improved diplomatic ties and economic aid, mostly in the form of energy.

But the talks have been bogged down over Pyongyang's failure to produce the declaration of its nuclear programmes, a prelude to its facilities eventually being dismantled.

The report would not include nuclear weapons, Hill said.

"The declaration at this point, the purpose of it, is to list all of their nuclear materials and all of their nuclear facilities and programmes," Hill said. "With regard to weapons, that has always been the vision for a subsequent phase."

Much of the diplomacy on the issue in the past few weeks has centred on how to verify the contents of any report that North Korea hands over.

Hill has twice met his Chinese counterpart, Wu Dawei, since arriving in China late last week, and was expected to meet with Chinese academics on Tuesday. (Reporting by Lindsay Beck; Editing by Nick Macfie)





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