2007年VOA标准英语-UN Nuclear Inspector Says North Korea Committed(在线收听) |
By Luis Ramirez The chief United Nations weapons inspector, Mohamed ElBaradei, says North Korean officials have told him they are committed to getting rid of their nuclear weapons programs. VOA's Luis Ramirez reports from Beijing, where ElBaradei spoke to reporters shortly after returning from meetings in Pyongyang. "We cleared the air," he said. "We opened the door for a normal relationship between North Korea and the IAEA. And both of us agreed that the most important thing is to look forward and not back." North Korea has not allowed U.N. inspectors into the country since it expelled them in 2002 at the start of the nuclear crisis. The agreement reached among delegates to the six-nation North Korea nuclear talks last month calls for North Korea to shut down and seal its only nuclear plant and plutonium factory by mid-April. In exchange, the North is to get energy aid and diplomatic concessions. ElBaradei said that while the North Koreans stated they are willing to allow U.N. inspectors to return to the country and verify the shutdown, they are not ready to do so yet. "They are, in their view, waiting for implementation by the other parties of their commitment," he said. "Specifically they are waiting for the lifting of the financial sanctions." In last month's agreement, the United States committed to settling a dispute over the freezing of North Korean accounts at a Macau bank. The U.S. imposed the sanctions in response to what Washington says was North Korean money laundering and counterfeiting. The United States Treasury Department is scheduled to announce a decision on the Macau bank in Washington later on Wednesday. Hill arrived in Beijing Wednesday to take part in working group talks among six-party delegates, which also include China, Japan, Russia, and South Korea. On Monday, the chief delegates are scheduled to reconvene for a full session of the negotiations. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2007/3/37617.html |