North Korea demands US compensation over scuttled project (AP) Updated: 2005-11-28 16:28
North Korea on Monday demanded compensation from the United States over a
scuttled project to build two nuclear reactors in the nation under a 1994
agreement.
Last week, the United States, South Korea, the European Union and Japan
terminated the project promised under the 1994 so-called agreed framework, where
the North agreed to scrap its plutonium-based nuclear weapons program.
The decade-old light-water reactor project had been mothballed for the last
two years with the outbreak of the latest nuclear crisis, after U.S. officials
said in late 2002 that the North violated the earlier deal by admitting to a
secret uranium-enrichment program.
"Now that the construction of the (light-water reactors) came to a final
stop, (North Korea) is compelled to blame the U.S. for having overturned the
(agreed framework) and demand it compensate for the political and economic
losses it has caused to the former," an unnamed North Korean Foreign Ministry
spokesman said in a statement carried by the country's official Korean Central
News Agency.
The spokesman claimed the move to shutter the reactor project proved the
North was "quite just" in demanding simultaneous actions to build mutual
confidence with the United States in exchange for disarmament.
To resolve the latest standoff, the United States has sought to convince the
North to disarm at six-nation talks hosted by China. In September during those
negotiations, the North pledged in principle to disarm, but afterward maintained
that it would first need light-water reactors for electricity.
In the latest agreement, Washington and other countries agreed to consider
the issue of giving the North a reactor at an appropriate time. At a summit this
month of Asia-Pacific leaders in South Korea, U.S. President George W. Bush said
no reactors would be considered before the North gives up its nuclear weapons
program.
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