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DPRK not near restoring nuclear plant: ROK
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-10-08 16:17

SEOUL: Foreign minister of the Republic of Korea (ROK) said on Thursday there were no signs that the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) was in the final stages of restoring an ageing nuclear plant, knocking down a report that operations could soon resume at the facility.

ROK's Yonhap news agency on Tuesday quoted a government source as saying Pyongyang was in the final stages of restoring the Yongbyon complex, which when fully operational, can produce enough material for one nuclear bomb a year.

"What we know is that they are not yet at that kind of stage," Yu Myung-hwan said when asked whether the DPRK was about to restore the five-megawatt nuclear reactor at Yongbyon, which is the country's primary source of weapons-grade plutonium.

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In 2007, the DPRK began taking apart the facility that includes the reactor, a fuel fabrication plant and a plutonium separation facility under a six-way deal in return for aid and better global standing.

It said earlier this year it had resumed the part of the plant used to separate plutonium from spent nuclear fuel in anger at being punished by the United Nations for a long-range rocket launch widely seen as a disguised missile test.

On Tuesday, Pyongyang signalled it could return to the dormant disarmament-for-aid talks among the two Koreas, China, Japan, Russia and the United States that Pyongyang had declared dead six months ago.

Yu said that Pyongyang would still be subject to UN Security Council sanctions imposed after its nuclear test in May even if it returns to the nuclear disarmament talks.

"It is the position of not only South Korea and the United States but also Japan, Russia and China that sanctions cannot be lifted or suspended just because the North (DPRK) returns to dialogue," Yu said.

DPRK's top leader Kim Jong-il told Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao on a visit to Pyongyang he first wanted talks with Washington.