Thursday, 22-March-2007
Almotamar Net - Talks in Beijing on North Koreas nuclear programme have broken down with the North Korean and Russian envoys both apparently heading home.
 
Kim Kye-gwan, North Koreas chief negotiator, was seen taking a flight back to Pyongyang from Beijing on Thursday afternoon, following two days of stalled talks.
Almotamar,net AlJazeera -
Talks in Beijing on North Korea's nuclear programme have broken down with the North Korean and Russian envoys both apparently heading home.

Kim Kye-gwan, North Korea's chief negotiator, was seen taking a flight back to Pyongyang from Beijing on Thursday afternoon, following two days of stalled talks.


The North Korean delegation had refused to continue with negotiations until it is able to access $25m in funds that had been frozen in a Macau bank.

The US said on Monday that it had given approval for the funds to be released, raising hopes that a major sticking point had been removed.





Nuclear arms dispute

But the North Koreans said no talks would be held until the funds appeared in a Bank of China account held in Beijing.

It is not clear what has caused the delay in transferring the funds.

Kim Kye-gwan made no comment to reporters waiting at Beijing airport.

The six nation talks � bringing together envoys from the US, China, Russia, Japan and the two Koreas � had been intended to fine-tune a timetable for North Korea to shut down its nuclear weapons programme and disarm.

The North Korean funds were frozen in 2005 following allegations from the US that they were related to North Korean money laundering and counterfeiting operations.

Christopher Hill, the chief US envoy to the nuclear talks, had expected North Korea to be satisfied with Monday's announcement that Washington had completed its investigations and would allow the funds to be moved.

Instead the North Korean delegation said it would not proceed with talks until the money had been transferred to the Beijing bank account.

Under a landmark deal agreed in February North Korea agreed to start dismantling its nuclear programme in return for promises of aid and talks on normalising relations.







This story was printed at: Monday, 29-April-2024 Time: 08:32 AM
Original story link: http://www.almotamar.net/en/2230.htm