Bangkok Post

South gears up for North summit

Jane’s report suggests regime testing reactor

- EPA-EFE

SEOUL: South Korean officials began preparatio­ns yesterday for a summit next month with North Korea aimed at reducing tensions on the peninsula, as a report showed the North had probably begun testing a nuclear reactor as recently as late February.

The report by intelligen­ce analysts at Jane’s by IHS Markit said satellite imagery from Feb 25 showed emissions of non-condensabl­e gases from a stack at the North’s experiment­al light water reactor (ELWR) at the Yongbyon Atomic Energy Research Center, suggesting preliminar­y testing had likely begun.

The reactor could be used to produce weapons-grade plutonium, but North Korea is believed to already have enough fissile material for multiple nuclear bombs, according to Joshua Pollack, a senior research associate at the Middlebury Institute of Internatio­nal Studies at Monterey.

Meantime, South Korean officials were set to convene their first meeting at the presidenti­al Blue House to prepare for a summit between President Moon Jae-in and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un late next month.

Headed by Mr Moon’s chief of staff, Im Jong-seok, the team will hammer out plans for the summit, including when to contact the North and what will be discussed between Mr Kim and Mr Moon.

US President Donald Trump also accepted a summit invitation from Kim Jong-un, after a South Korean envoy told him earlier this month that the North’s leader was prepared to discuss denucleari­sation. Mr Trump and Mr Kim are expected to meet sometime in May although a location has not been set yet.

Although North Korea’s state media has yet to comment on the pending summits with Mr Moon and Mr Trump, its foreign minister, Ri Yong-ho, is visiting Sweden for talks with his Swedish counterpar­t Margot Wallstrom. Mr Ri’s trip prompted speculatio­n it could lay the groundwork for the summit in Sweden between Mr Trump and Mr Kim.

The push for these summits came after the North Korean leader said in a New Year’s address that he wanted to improve relations with the South following a year of heightened tensions brought on by the North’s nuclear and missile tests.

North Korea completed constructi­on of the Yongbyon ELWR in 2013.

It was optimised for civilian electricit­y production, and although it is not yet operationa­l, it could start running with “little warning” later in 2018 or 2019, the Jane’s report said.

The experiment­al reactor is likely too small to provide much in the way of electricit­y, but is part of a “long-running effort” to develop a light-water reactor after a deal by an internatio­nal consortium, including the United States, to provide two such nuclear power reactors in the 1990s fell apart, Mr Pollack said.

“It’s their way of saying, ‘see, since you won’t give us what you promised, we’ll do it ourselves’,” Mr Pollack said.

“They haven’t made any agreements lately with the US, so the work goes on.”

An official at the South’s defence ministry said authoritie­s were aware of the Jane’s report, which follows a similar one released on the 38 North website earlier this month that said a nearby reactor had also continued to show signs of operation.

The isolated state has maintained it will continue developing its nuclear programme but later added it was open to abandoning the programme if the security of its regime was guaranteed.

 ??  ?? South Korean Unificatio­n Minister Cho Myoung-gyon meets European Union Ambassador to South Korea Michael Reiterer at the ministry in Seoul.
South Korean Unificatio­n Minister Cho Myoung-gyon meets European Union Ambassador to South Korea Michael Reiterer at the ministry in Seoul.

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