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North korea opium { April 23 2003 }

Original Source Link: (May no longer be active)
   http://www.insidebaltimore.com/news/world/koreas0421.shtml

In recent years, there have been frequent reports that opium, heroin and methamphetamines are produced in North Korea, and that North Korean nationals are involved in trafficking drugs, particularly to Japan and Taiwan.

http://www.insidebaltimore.com/news/world/koreas0421.shtml

April 23, 2003
WORLD NEWS
South, North Korea Agree to Hold Talks
Seoul, South Korea — South Korea announced plans Monday to hold high-level talks with North Korea next week after President Bush gave diplomatic pressure a "good chance" of succeeding in persuading the communist nation to give up its nuclear ambitions.

In a telephone message, South Korean Unification Minister Jeong Se-hyun accepted the North Korean offer to hold negotiations April 27-29, his office said.

The announcement came days before the United States, North Korea and China were expected to meet in separate talks in Beijing to discuss the North's suspected nuclear weapons programs. Those talks could take place as early as this week.

Along with the United States, regional neighbors China, Japan and South Korea oppose a nuclear-armed North Korea. Bush cited that unanimity of purpose - if not of strategy - as reason for optimism.

"I believe that all four of us working together have a good chance of convincing North Korea to abandon her ambitions to develop nuclear arsenals," Bush told reporters in Fort Hood, Texas.

North Korea has accused the United States of planning to invade, and said the U.S.-led war against Iraq was proof that it needed a strong military deterrent.

"If enemies invade our inviolable sky, land and seas even an inch, destroy up the aggressors with merciless annihilating blows," read one slogan carried by its newspapers, KCNA, the country's news agency, said in an English-language report. North Korea routinely issues such belligerent rhetoric.

Washington says it does not plan to invade, and has said for months that a diplomatic solution to the nuclear issue was possible. However, it has not ruled out a military option.

Amid concern over North Korea's missile capabilities, a prominent South Korean newspaper reported that U.S. spy satellites detected an explosion at a North Korean ballistic missile test site in November. The newspaper, Chosun Ilbo, cited sources at the South Korean Defense Ministry and the U.S. military.

The explosion took place during a missile engine test at the site in North Hamkyong Province on North Korea's east coast, damaging the site and delaying the North's missile development, the newspaper said Monday.

"We cannot verify that," said Lee Ferguson, a U.S. military spokeswoman in Seoul.

North Korea is believed to finance some of its military activities with drug trafficking, but it was not immediately unclear whether 30 North Koreans detained in Australia were working for Pyongyang.

In Australia, a court refused bail to the North Koreans after the Australian navy stormed a North Korean cargo ship allegedly involved in trafficking $48 million worth of heroin. The crew have not yet been charged.

The cargo ship, Pong Su, was intercepted Sunday by a navy warship after it refused police orders to stop off Australia's south coast. Troops boarded the ship using a helicopter and boarding vessels.

In recent years, there have been frequent reports that opium, heroin and methamphetamines are produced in North Korea, and that North Korean nationals are involved in trafficking drugs, particularly to Japan and Taiwan.

South Korea has sought to restart the inter-Korean talks, which the North had broken off in recent weeks.

The two Koreas initially arranged to hold Cabinet-level talks earlier this month, but those talks were canceled when Pyongyang failed to confirm them. North Korea also suspended two other working-level talks last month. On Saturday, North Korea proposed holding high-level talks later this month in its capital.

After insisting only on one-on-one talks with Washington, North Korea agreed this month to let China sit at the table. South Korea hopes it will eventually be involved in the negotiations, along with other countries, including Japan and Russia.

"North Korea's goal is to obtain security guarantees and economic aid, and economic aid cannot be given only by the United States," said Moon Hee-sang, South Korea's presidential chief of staff. He said security guarantees would also require the participation of neighboring countries.

Over the weekend, North Korea issued conflicting statements about whether it was reprocessing more than 8,000 spent nuclear fuel rods at its main nuclear complex in Yongbyon.

Intelligence experts say reprocessing spent fuel rods will enable North Korea to yield enough plutonium to build several nuclear bombs within months. Washington believes Pyongyang already has one or two bombs.

The nuclear dispute flared in October, when U.S. officials said North Korea admitted to having a secret nuclear program in violation of a 1994 accord.

Copyright 2003 The Associated Press.
All Rights Reserved.




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