WORLD> Asia-Pacific
S.Korea to send nuclear experts to DPRK
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-01-13 15:46
SEOUL, South Korea -- South Korea will send a team of nuclear experts to the Democratic People's Republic of Korea this week to survey Pyongyang's unused fuel rods, the Foreign Ministry said Tuesday.

Related readings:
 S.Korea offers $300,000 to help Gaza people
 SKorea to freeze foreigners' employment permit
 Seoul says N.Korea restoring nuclear complex
 
Gates: Japan, others must address NKorea

The delegation led by Hwang Joon-kook, Seoul's No. 2 nuclear envoy for the disarmament talks on the DPRK's nuclear weapons programs, will fly to the North on Thursday, the ministry said in a statement.

The ministry did not say how long the delegation will stay in the DPRK.

During the trip, the South Korean experts will examine technological and economic factors over the unused fuel rods, the ministry said.

Pyongyang agreed to export its unused fuel rods to other countries during the latest disarmament talks in Beijing in December. The talks also involve South Korea, the United States, China, Russia and Japan.

Seoul has said in the past it would consider buying the North's fuel rods if they can be adapted to work in South Korea's power-generating nuclear reactors.

The US and five other regional powers have sought to coax DPRK, which tested a nuclear device in 2006, to abandon its nuclear program by offering aid for disarmament. The process has been held up over verification of its past nuclear activities.