The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) said yesterday that the
United States has agreed to remove it from a list of terrorism-sponsoring states
and lift economic sanctions against it.
The US decision came after the DPRK agreed to declare and disable its nuclear
weapons programs by the end of 2007, in a two-day meeting in Geneva,
Switzerland.
"The (Geneva) meeting discussed the goals at the next phase for the
implementation of the Sept. 19 joint statement and reached a series of
agreements," the official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) quoted a spokesman
of the DPRK Foreign Ministry as saying.
The two sides discussed the issue of taking practical measures to neutralize
the existing nuclear facilities in the DPRK within this year, the spokesman
said.
The spokesman confirmed that DPRK will dismantle the nuclear facilities in
Yongbyon at the end of this year, but the KCNA report did not mention whether
the DPRK will declare all of its nuclear programs by the end of this year.
According to Christopher Hill, chief nuclear negotiator of the United States,
the DPRK had agreed to "provide a full declaration of all of their nuclear
programs and will disable their nuclear programs by the end of this year, 2007."
"In return for this the US decided to take such political and economic
measures for compensation as delisting the DPRK as a terrorism sponsor and
lifting all sanctions that have been applied according to the Trading with the
Enemy Act," the spokesman added.
The DPRK had repeatedly demanded removal from the terror sponsors list, which
is considered a key element in the relationship between the two countries.
The spokesman also said the Geneva talks "laid a groundwork for making
progress at the plenary session of the six-party talks to be held in the
future."
Besides the US and the DPRK, the six-party negotiations also involve China,
the Republic of Korea, Japan and Russia. The next full session of the six-party
negotiations is expected to start in Beijing in mid-September.