. Space Industry and Business News .




.
NUKEWARS
N. Korea, US agree on nuclear halt
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Feb 29, 2012

Amnesty urges China not to return N. Korea refugees
Seoul (AFP) Feb 29, 2012 - Human rights watchdog Amnesty International urged China Wednesday not to repatriate North Korean refugees, joining growing calls by South Korea and members of the global community.

Activists and Seoul lawmakers say about 30 North Koreans who recently fled to China will soon be sent back. They face harsh punishment or even death in their homeland, according to the activists.

Some have already been returned, according to local media reports.

Amnesty said in a statement returnees are sent to labour camps where they are subject to "torture and other cruel, inhumane, or degrading treatment". It cited former detainees it had interviewed.

Activists say the North has strengthened border security and toughened punishment for defectors during the politically sensitive power transfer from the late leader Kim Jong-Il to his son, Jong-Un.

"The reported denunciation of border-crossers by North Korea's new government... could signal that those returned may be subjected to even harsher punishment than usual," said Amnesty's Korea expert, Rajiv Narayan.

"The Chinese authorities must also stop breaking international law and cease forcibly returning people to a country where they face persecution, torture and death."

Seoul has repeatedly called on Beijing to treat fugitives from the North as refugees and not to repatriate them. China says they are economic migrants and not refugees deserving protection.

A Seoul parliamentary committee on Monday passed a resolution that criticised China's policy. The UN refugee agency UNHCR last Friday also urged Beijing not to send the refugees back.


North Korea's new leadership said Wednesday it would suspend nuclear and missile tests and its uranium enrichment programme as part of a deal that includes US food aid for the impoverished nation.

The agreement, confirmed simultaneously by Washington, represents a potential breakthrough in efforts to halt the North's drive for atomic weapons following the death of longtime leader Kim Jong-Il last December.

The deal followed talks in Beijing last week between the two sides, the first dialogue since Kim's young and untested son Kim Jong-Un took power.

A Pyongyang foreign ministry spokesman said Washington had promised 240,000 tonnes of "nutritional assistance", with the prospect of additional food aid for the North, which has suffered severe food shortages since a famine in the 1990s.

The North said it would allow the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), to monitor the moratorium on uranium enrichment.

The enrichment programme, first disclosed in November 2010, could give the communist state a second way to make atomic weapons in addition to its longstanding plutonium programme.

This is believed to have produced enough material for six to eight atomic weapons.

The North said the US side offered to discuss the lifting of sanctions and provision of light-water reactors to generate electricity as a priority, once long-stalled six-party nuclear disarmament talks resume.

The Beijing discussions were aimed at persuading the North to return to the six-nation talks which it abandoned in April 2009. It staged its second atomic weapons test a month later, following the first in 2006.

There were widespread reports in December that the two sides were close to such a deal, but the sudden death of Kim Jong-Il threw the process into uncertainty.

The new leadership headed by Jong-Un has taken a generally tough tone with the United States and South Korea, blasting joint military exercises which started on Monday as a rehearsal for war.

"The United States still has profound concerns regarding North Korean behaviour across a wide range of areas, but today's announcement reflects important, if limited, progress in addressing some of these," US State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said in a statement.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told US lawmakers the announcement "represents a modest first step in the right direction". The United States, she said, "will be watching closely and judging North Korea's new leaders by their actions."

IAEA chief Yukiya Amano called the deal "an important step forward" and Japan's Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba welcoming it in similar terms. His country is a member of the six-party talks along with the two Koreas, host China, the United States and Russia.

The North said it "agreed to a moratorium on nuclear tests, long-range missile launches, and uranium enrichment activity at Yongbyon and (to) allow the IAEA to monitor the moratorium on uranium enrichment while productive dialogues continue".

It said both sides reaffirmed their commitment to a September 2005 six-nation deal. This envisaged the North scrapping its nuclear programmes in return for major diplomatic and economic benefits and for a peace treaty formally ending the 1950-53 Korean War.

In the 2005 deal, the six parties agreed to "respect" the North's desire for light-water reactors to generate electricity. Such reactors are less easily converted to military applications.

Washington-based North Korea expert L. Gordon Flake said the United States was eager for a cooling of tensions with North Korea before elections in November.

"In the context of a political year in Washington, the worst thing we could have when dealing with ongoing events in Syria and elsewhere is for North Korea to flare up," said Flake, executive director of the Mansfield Foundation.

Flake said the United States had probably already been prepared to provide North Korea with food aid based on humanitarian assessments.

"It appears to me that the North Koreans have agreed to a moratorium and inspections in return for something that we were already ready to give them, so it's a good deal for the US," he said.

Pyongyang, in a statement on its official news agency, said both sides recognised the armistice which ended the war as "the cornerstone of peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula until the conclusion of a peace treaty".

Nuland said the United States "reaffirms that it does not have hostile intent toward the DPRK (North Korea) and is prepared to take steps to improve our bilateral relationship in the spirit of mutual respect for sovereignty and equality".

She called for greater people-to-people exchanges.

Related Links
Learn about nuclear weapons doctrine and defense at SpaceWar.com
Learn about missile defense at SpaceWar.com
All about missiles at SpaceWar.com
Learn about the Superpowers of the 21st Century at SpaceWar.com




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries




NKorea agrees to nuclear halt, inspectors: US
Washington (AFP) Feb 29, 2012 - The United States said Wednesday that North Korea has agreed to halt its nuclear program and allow back UN inspectors, in a surprise breakthrough soon after the communist state's veteran leader died.

Welcoming the progress, President Barack Obama's administration said it would move ahead on a long-mulled plan to deliver 240,000 metric tons of food aid to the impoverished state which suffered a major famine in the 1990s.

But the agreement, reached after talks last week in Beijing, is certain to be met with skepticism in many quarters as North Korea has repeatedly agreed to end its nuclear program only to renounce agreements when tensions rise.

"The United States still has profound concerns regarding North Korean behavior across a wide range of areas, but today's announcement reflects important, if limited, progress in addressing some of these," State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said in a statement.

Nuland said that North Korea -- which has tested two nuclear weapons -- has agreed to the return of inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency, the UN nuclear watchdog, at its main Yongbyon nuclear facility.

North Korea "has agreed to implement a moratorium on long-range missile launches, nuclear tests and nuclear activities at Yongbyon, including uranium enrichment activities," she said.

The agreement came despite initial US doubts that North Korea would take major decisions after the death in December of veteran leader Kim Jong-Il, which put control of the authoritarian state in the hands of untested young son Kim Jong-Un.

North Korea kicked out IAEA inspectors in 2009 when it accused the Obama administration of hostility and renounced a previous six-nation agreement to halt its nuclear program.

Nuland in her statement said that the United States "reaffirms that it does not have hostile intent toward the DPRK and is prepared to take steps to improve our bilateral relationship in the spirit of mutual respect for sovereignty and equality."

Nuland also called for greater people-to-people exchanges with North Korea, known officially as the DPRK or Democratic People's Republic of Korea.



.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



NUKEWARS
Republicans criticize US, N. Korea deal
Washington (AFP) Feb 29, 2012
Republican lawmakers Wednesday criticized President Barack Obama and warned that North Korea was not to be trusted after it promised to suspend its nuclear program in exchange for US food aid. Representative Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, head of the House Foreign Affairs Committee and a staunch critic of communist countries, said that the North Korea agreement "sounds a lot like the failed agreements ... read more


NUKEWARS
IBM takes giant step to faster, quantum computers

Tech giants get lecture on perils of gadget worship

NIST reveals switching mechanism in promising computer memory device

A Rainbow for the Palm of Your Hand

NUKEWARS
Raytheon's US Air Force Satellite Terminal Achieves Two Critical Milestones

Northrop Grumman Airborne Network Demonstrates Tactical Potential at Army Integration Exercise

Lockheed Martin Delivers Second AEHF Satellite To U.S. Air Force For Upcoming Launch

United Launch Alliance Atlas V Launches Mobile User Objective System-1 Mission

NUKEWARS
Ariane 5 readied for dual-satellite launch fpr Asia-Pacific telco

Aiming For An Open Window To Launch Into Space

Sea Launch on Track to Loft Intelsat 19

NuSTAR Mated to its Rocket

NUKEWARS
Galileo on the ground reaches some of Earth's loneliest places

China launches 11th satellite for independent navigation system

Chinese province school buses to have GPS

NASA Pinning Down "Here" Better Than Ever

NUKEWARS
ISRO bets on satellite navigation for aviation services

Boeing to sell ten 777s to China Southern

Aircraft of the future could capture and re-use some of their own

Solar Impulse completes 72 hour simulated flight

NUKEWARS
Solving a Spintronic Mystery

Transforming computers of the future with optical interconnects

Penn Researchers Build First Physical "Metatronic" Circuit

Single-atom transistor is end of Moore's Law; may be beginning of quantum computing

NUKEWARS
Facility for Climate and Environmental Monitoring from Space

Google Street View to launch in Botswana

NASA Map Sees Earth's Trees In A New Light

NASA Satellite Finds Earth's Clouds are Getting Lower

NUKEWARS
China orders more accurate air-quality measure

EU takes France to court over nitrates water pollution

China accuses US firm over child lead poisoning

Gases drawn into smog particles stay there


Memory Foam Mattress Review

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News

.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2012 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement