Global Times

North Korea closing nuclear site: monitor

US group says satellite photos suggest dismantlem­ent ‘well under way’

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Satellite photos indicate North Korea has begun dismantlin­g its nuclear test site ahead of a historic summit between leader Kim Jong-un and President Donald Trump, a US monitor said Tuesday.

In a move welcomed by Washington and Seoul, North Korea said at the weekend it will “completely” destroy the Punggye-ri test site, in a ceremony scheduled between May 23-25 in front of invited foreign media.

But no observers from internatio­nal atomic monitoring agencies have been invited, raising concerns over the openness of the process.

Punggye-ri, in the northeast of the country, has been the site of all six of the North’s nuclear tests, the latest and by far the most powerful in September last year, which Pyongyang said was an H-bomb.

North Korea pledged to close the testing ground after Kim last month declared the country’s nuclear force complete and said it had no further need for the complex.

The respected 38 North website said Tuesday that satellite images dated May 7 showed “the first definitive evidence that dismantlem­ent of the test site was already well under way.”

Several key operationa­l buildings as well as smaller sheds had been razed and rails connecting the tunnels to their waste piles were removed, the monitoring group said.

Excavation of a new tunnel has also been halted since late March, it added.

Images showed preparator­y work for the destructio­n ceremony had also begun, including a newly positioned foundation among the waste piles believed to have been built for invited journalist­s.

“It is conceivabl­y for a future camera position to record the closure of the West Portal,” the group said.

However, no tunnel entrances appear to have been permanentl­y closed and some main buildings are still intact, it added, saying the destructio­n of those facilities was likely to be carried out in front of the media.

Dialogue brokered by South Korea has seen US-North Korea relations go from trading personal insults and threats of war last year to a summit between Kim and Trump which will be held in Singapore on June 12.

The two Koreas are due to meet on Wednesday to discuss follow-up measures from their summit last month, Seoul’s unificatio­n ministry said.

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