North Korea says it has stopped disabling its nuclear facilities to protest against Washington's failure to remove it from its list of state sponsors of terror.The foreign ministry said in a statement on Tuesday that, the suspension took effect on August 14 and that it has notified countries involved in six-party talks on its nuclear programmes.
The ministry said it was forced to take the step as countermeasures in a situation where the United States violated the agreement. Pyongyang has been disabling the facilities under a disarmament-for-aid deal reached last year with Washington.
The statement said the country will consider restoring the Yongbyon facilities to their original states but did not name when it would do so.
The cooling tower of the Yongbyon nuclear facility was destroyed in a public demolition in June to demonstrate North Korea's commitment to scrapping its nuclear programme. Removal from Washington's list of state sponsors of terror is one of the key concessions offered to North Korea in exchange for shutting down and disabling the reactor. After North Korea turned over a list of its nuclear programmes in June, the US announced Pyongyang would be delisted.
The two sides have, however, been negotiating on how to verify the nuclear declaration, with Washington saying it would remove Pyonyang only after a verification plan is agreed.North Korea's announcement is being seen as a bargaining tactic rather than an intent to restart its nuclear facilities.It was however indicated that in the past, [North Korea] has made a lot of threats on the issue.
China, Japan, South Korea, the US and Russia have all been involved in brokering the deal disablement deal.