US rebuffs N Korea on terror list

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A top US official has rejected North Korea's claim that Washington has agreed to remove it from a list of countries that support terrorism.

Nuclear negotiator Christopher Hill said that such a move would depend on progress by Pyongyang towards ending its nuclear programme.

On Monday North Korea said that the US had agreed to the move at bilateral talks in Geneva at the weekend.

In return, it would disable its nuclear facilities by year-end, it said.

North Korea wants to be delisted to improve its international standing.

It was blacklisted in January 1988, following the bombing of a South Korean airliner. All 115 passengers on board were killed.

Nuclear progress

North Korea said on Monday that the two sides had agreed "practical measures to neutralise the existing nuclear facilities" in the communist nation by the end of the year.

NUCLEAR TIMELINE 2007 Feb: N Korea agrees to shut down its nuclear programme in return for energy aid and other benefitsApril: Deadline to "shut down and seal" Yongbyon reactor missedJune: Row over N Korean funds frozen in Macau bank resolvedJuly: N Korea shuts down and seals Yongbyon reactor in first phase of dealSept: N Korea agrees to declare and disable its nuclear facilities by the end of the year <a class="" href="/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/2340405.stm">Q&A: N Korea stand-off</a> <a class="" href="/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/2604437.stm">Timeline: Nuclear crisis</a>

Washington would compensate North Korea for this by "deleting our country from the list of terror-supporting nations and fully lifting sanctions imposed under the law on trading with enemy countries", it said.

But Mr Hill, in Australia for the forthcoming Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation summit, said that this was not the case.

"No, they haven't been taken off the terrorism list," he said. "Their getting off that list will depend on further denuclearisation."

The talks between the US and North Korea are part of a wider international process aimed at ending Pyongyang's nuclear programme for good.

In July, North Korea shut down its main reactor, Yongbyon, in return for aid.

Negotiators are now hammering out the next part of the deal, under which North Korea must disclose and dismantle all its nuclear facilities in return for more aid and political incentives.