Photos released of activity at N.Korean reactor sites (AFP) Updated: 2005-09-15 08:53
A US thinktank with ties to the diplomatic and intelligence communities
released a satellite photograph which it said showed North Korea had resumed
operating a five-megawatt nuclear reactor, AFP reported.
The Washington-based Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS)
displayed on its web site a satellite picture of the reactor at Yongbyon, North
Korea's main nuclear complex north of the capital Pyongyang.
The ISIS said the photo shows "a steam plume from the cooling tower" of the
reactor. "This plume indicates that the reactor is operating," the ISIS said in
a statement.
 This new satellite image released by
Digitalglobe shows the 5 MWe nuclear reactor at Yongbyon, North Korea, 11
September, 2005. [AFP] | The institute also
released a new satellite photograph of a 50-megawatt reactor construction site
at Yongbyon which it said showed "new activity, though not the resumption of
large-scale construction."
It pointed to a new road surface and what it described as a "new object,
possibly a mobile crane."
The photos can be viewed online at www.isis-online.org.
Their release came as North Korea, South Korea, Japan, China, Russia and
the United States held another round of talks in Beijing on North Korea's
nuclear program.
The talks are aimed at persuading North Korea, which expelled
international monitors and now says it has nuclear weapons, to give up the bomb
in exchange for security guarantees as well as energy and economic aid.
Negotiations have been bogged down over North Korea's demand for peaceful
nuclear energy, a demand resisted by Washington which has said it cannot be
trusted.
A Japanese daily, Asahi Shimbun, reported last month that North Korea had
reactivated the five-megawatt nuclear reactor at Yongbyon in July, just ahead of
a previous round of the six-party talks.
In April, North Korea said it had shut down the reactor, 90 kilometers (50
miles) north of Pyongyang, while it was preparing to reprocess more spent fuel,
a move that could result in the production of enough plutonium to double its
nuclear arsenal.
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