The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) has handed over its key
nuclear weapons documents to a visiting US diplomat, local media quoted a senior
State Department official as saying yesterday.
US envoy Sung Kim, who received the documents in Pyongyang earlier in the
day, is to carry them to South Korea later this week, the unidentified official
said.
The documents are detailed technical logs from the DPRK's shuttered plutonium
reactor. "They are an important element in the verification of a declaration
which will include figures for the amount of plutonium they (the DPRK) have
produced," the official said.
Prior to his latest visit to the DPRK, Sung Kim, director of the Korea Office
at the State Department, had talks with DPRK officials in Pyongyang on April 22
on how to verify any declaration the DPRK may make about its nuclear programs.
Under an agreement reached at the six-party talks in Beijing in February last
year, the DPRK agreed to abandon all nuclear weapons and programs and declare
all its nuclear programs and facilities by the end of 2007, in exchange for
diplomatic and economic incentives.
However, the DPRK missed the deadline despite reported progress in its
nuclear disablement and declaration.
The United States has urged the country to fully declare its nuclear programs
and activities.