Google – AFP, Anna Malpas (AFP), 12 Sep 2013
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A cooling
tower at North Korea's Yongbyon nuclear complex shortly
before it was
demolished on June 27, 2008 (CCTV/AFP/File)
|
MOSCOW —
Russia on Thursday warned of a potential "man-made catastrophe" if
North Korea restarts an ageing plutonium reactor to boost its stockpile of
nuclear weapons, after US experts spotted steam rising from the Yongbyon
facility.
The
reactor, which was completed in 1986, is outdated and North Korea could suffer
a major disaster if it is restarted, a Russian diplomatic source told the
Interfax news agency.
The warning
came after researchers at the US-Korea Institute said Wednesday that satellite
images taken on August 31 showed plumes of white steam rising from a building
next to the reactor.
"Our
main concern is linked to a very likely man-made disaster as a consequence. The
reactor is in a nightmarish state, it is a design dating back to the
1950s," the Russian source said.
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North
Korea's Yongbyon nuclear
facility (AFP/Graphic)
|
The US
envoy on North Korea meanwhile said the reported restart of the reactor would
be "a misstep on the part of North Korea".
"If it
turns out that these reports are true that North Korea has restarted the
five-megawatt plutonium reactor, this would be a very serious matter,"
Glyn Davies told reporters after meeting Japanese foreign ministry officials in
Tokyo.
Such a move
would "seriously violate the United Nations Security Council
resolutions" and North Korea's commitments under a 2005 joint statement
after six-party talks, Davies said.
The Russian
diplomat speaking to Interfax said he did not know for sure whether North Korea
had relaunched the facility mothballed in 2007.
"It is
obvious that some works are being conducted, and for a long time at that.
According to some signs, steps were indeed being taken to relaunch it,"
the diplomat said.
"We do
not have any information that the reactor has been relaunched."
![]() |
This August
6, 2012 satellite image
shows the Yongbyon Nuclear Scientific
Research Centre
in North Korea
(GeoEye Satellite Image/AFP/File)
|
But the
white steam "could simply be testing of the generator", the Russian
diplomatic source cited by Interfax cautioned.
The
Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency said it was unable to verify
the claim since North Korea has barred its inspectors since 2009.
"We
are aware of the media report," said spokeswoman Gill Tudor.
"The
agency continues its monitoring of the DPRK's nuclear activities by available
means, such as satellite imagery analysis."
North Korea
declared in April that it would restart all facilities at Yongbyon to
"bolster the nuclear armed force both in quality and quantity".
The pledge
came at a period of high international tension after North Korea defiantly
carried out a third nuclear test in February and threatened to attack the
United States over its reaction.
Yet
Pyongyang has more recently embarked on something of a charm offensive,
agreeing to reopen a joint industrial zone with South Korea and to resume
reunions of families separated by the Korean War.
![]() |
South
Korean officials inspect North
Korea's Yongbyon nuclear complex,
on January 16, 2009 (South Korean
Foreign Ministry/AFP/File)
|
In 2007,
North Korea shut down the Yongbyon reactor under a six-nation aid-for-disarmament
deal and publicly knocked down its cooling tower.
The reactor
was the totalitarian state's sole way of producing plutonium, which it used to
conduct its first two nuclear tests in 2006 and 2009.
Pyongyang
is currently believed to have enough plutonium for about six bombs. The
Yongbyon reactor is capable of producing six kilogrammes (13 pounds) of
plutonium a year -- enough for one nuclear bomb.
In recent
weeks, North Korea has indicated its willingness to resume six-party talks on
its nuclear programme, involving the United States, Russia, China, Japan and
South Korea.
The US
point man on North Korea said Thursday that Washington hopes for
"meaningful, authentic and credible six-party talks".
But he also
added: "There is an issue right now what are six-party talks to be
about," insisting that Pyongyang could not set any agenda beyond scrapping
its nuclear programme.
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