The Borneo Post

Activity detected at N. Korea nuclear site — US monitor

-

SEOUL: Activity has been detected at North Korea’s main nuclear site, suggesting Pyongyang may be reprocessi­ng radioactiv­e material into bomb fuel since the collapse of a summit with Washington, a US monitor said yesterday.

The possible signs of fresh reprocessi­ng activity last week come after a February summit between US President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un ended abruptly without agreement on Pyongyang’s nuclear programme.

Since then North Korea has said it was mulling options for its diplomacy with the US and Kim said last week he was open to talks with Trump only if Washington came with the ‘proper attitude’.

The Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies said satellite imagery of the Yongbyon nuclear site on April 12 showed five railcars near its uranium enrichment facility and radiochemi­stry laboratory.

“In the past, these specialise­d railcars appear to have been associated with the movement of radioactiv­e material or reprocessi­ng campaigns,” the Washington-based monitor said.

“The current activity, along with their configurat­ions, does not rule out their possible involvemen­t in such activity, either before or after a reprocessi­ng campaign.”

Trump and Kim held their first landmark summit in Singapore last June, where the North Korean leader signed a vaguely-worded deal on the ‘denucleari­sation of the Korean peninsula’.

But their failure to reach

In the past, these specialise­d railcars appear to have been associated with the movement of radioactiv­e material or reprocessi­ng campaigns.

agreement at their second summit in Hanoi on walking back Pyongyang’s nuclear programme in exchange for relaxation of sanctions has raised questions over the future of the wider process.

The US president walked away from a partial deal proposed by Kim, which included an offer to dismantle the Yongbyon complex.

Yongbyon is home to the country’s first nuclear reactor, and is the only known source of plutonium for the North’s weapons programme.

Yongbyon is not believed to be the North’s only uranium enrichment facility and closing it down would not in and of itself signal an end to the country’s atomic programme.

North Korea suspended nuclear and missile testing during the diplomatic process in 2018 but the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency has said there were indication­s that Yongbyon has been in use as recently as the end of February. — AFP

Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies

 ??  ?? A view of what researcher­s of Beyond Parallel, a CSIS project, describe as a probably 20-foot shipping container near the uranium enrichment plant at the Yongbyon Nuclear Research Center in North Pyongan Province, North Korea, in this commercial satellite image. — Reuters photo
A view of what researcher­s of Beyond Parallel, a CSIS project, describe as a probably 20-foot shipping container near the uranium enrichment plant at the Yongbyon Nuclear Research Center in North Pyongan Province, North Korea, in this commercial satellite image. — Reuters photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia