Saturday, February 19, 2011

China blocked a report accusing North Korea of violating the sanctions

New York (Reuters) China has announced to the Security Council of the UN, to which it belongs, that it intends to block publication of a special report which accuses North Korea of violating the sanctions plea of its nuclear program, Western diplomats have revealed. The Expert Panel North Korea, under United Nations, presented the January 27 Council sanctions committee that monitors compliance with the restrictions imposed on Pyongyang.

Diplomats told Reuters poll of China's intent to block the release and transfer directly report to the Security Council. Informants say that one of the authors of the report, Xiaodong Xue, is Chinese. The study shows almost certainly that North Korea has over uranium enrichment facility in what is believed.

Also remember that this program and the development of a light water reactor involving violations of the sanctions. For this report, experts from the five permanent members and Japan and South Korea have talked to the American scientist Siegfried Hecker, who last visited a plant with 2,000 active centrifuges to enrich uranium to North Korea.

They have also gone to other sources. The Sanctions Committee on 23 February submitted its quarterly update. Diplomats hope that this body may meet before that date. China, meanwhile, hopes that this update may be mentioned at least version Hecker. The UN experts also fear that North Korea can "transfer fissile material or the means to produce" third countries due to lack of liquidity.

They had previously suggested that Syria, Burma and Iran could be a customer of China. They claimed that the uranium enrichment program could have begun "several years or decades" before April 2009, when Pyongyang publicly announced its existence, and that "illegal attempts latest acquisitions" are crucial to double production.

It also indicates that North Korea produced its centrifuges from the study of those provided by Abdul Qadeer Khan, the precursor of the Pakistani nuclear industry, who worked on the black market to North Korea, Libya and Iran. Pyongyang technicians could have been even Jan preparation tasks such as assembly and maintenance.

Finally, it is estimated that each year nearly two hundred graduate of North Korean nuclear engineers.

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