
IAEA chief notes indications of NK uranium enrichment plants at Kangson, Yongbyon in operation
The International Atomic Energy Agency chief said Monday there are signs of North Korea continuing to operate uranium enrichment plants in two different locations, as he stressed further development of its nuclear program is a "clear" breach of UN Security Council resolutions.
IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi made the remarks in reference to the plants in Kangson near Pyongyang, and Yongbyon, north of the capital, as he delivered an introductory statement during the agency's Board of Governors meeting in Vienna, Austria.
The assessment came after North Korean leader Kim Jong-un was reported in January to have toured a nuclear-material production base and a nuclear weapons institute -- a sign that Pyongyang is doubling down on its nuclear program though Seoul and Washington are pursuing the "complete" denuclearization of North Korea.
"There are indications that the uranium enrichment plants at Kangson and Yongbyon continue to operate, and there are indications that the light water reactor at Yongbyon continues to operate," he said according to a transcript posted on the IAEA website.
"Additions to the support infrastructure have been observed adjacent to the LWR," he added.
The IAEA has also observed that the 5-megawatt nuclear reactor at the Yongbyon complex resumed in mid-October last year, following a shutdown period of about 60 days, Grossi said.
"This shutdown is assessed to be of sufficient length to refuel the reactor and start its seventh operational cycle," he said. "Strong indicators of preparations for a new reprocessing campaign, including the operation of the steam plant serving the Radiochemical Laboratory, have been observed."
The laboratory is known as a key reprocessing facility to yield plutonium. To build a nuclear bomb, around 6 kilograms of plutonium is known to be required.
The director general took note of the release by the North's state media of photos depicting leader Kim visiting a nuclear material production base and the Nuclear Weapons Institute earlier this year.
"The depicted centrifuge cascades and infrastructure are consistent with the layout of a centrifuge enrichment facility and with the structure of the Yongbyon Uranium Enrichment Plant. This development follows the DPRK's publication in September 2024 of photographs of an undeclared enrichment facility at the Kangson Complex," he said.
DPRK is short for the North's official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
"The undeclared enrichment facilities at both Kangson and Yongbyon, combined with General Secretary Kim's call for 'overfulfilling the plan for producing weapons-grade nuclear materials,' are of serious concern," he added.
Grossi called the continuation of the North's nuclear program "deeply regrettable."
"I call upon the DPRK to comply fully with its obligations under relevant U.N. Security Council resolutions, to cooperate promptly with the agency in the full and effective implementation of its NPT Safeguards Agreement and to resolve all outstanding issues, especially those that have arisen during the absence of agency inspectors from the country," he said. NPT stands for the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Korea Herald
2 days ago
- Korea Herald
Kim Byung-kee, Lee's ally, elected floor leader of Democratic Party
Rep. Kim Byung-kee, a three-term lawmaker widely regarded as President Lee Jae-myung's ally, was elected Friday as the new floor leader of the ruling Democratic Party of Korea. The party said Kim won a majority of votes in an internal election, defeating Rep. Seo Young-kyo, a four-term lawmaker. 'I believe party members and fellow lawmakers elected me with the hope that I would become a bridgehead for the success of the Lee Jae-myung administration,' Kim said in his acceptance speech at the National Assembly in Yeouido, Seoul. 'I will carry forward the will of the people, complete the reforms, and lay the groundwork for restoring livelihoods, boosting economic growth and achieving national unity.' Kim has pledged to root out so-called 'insurrectionist forces' linked to former President Yoon Suk Yeol's botched martial law declaration on Dec. 3 last year. He has also vowed to push ahead with swift reforms of the prosecution, judiciary and media. The 63-year-old entered politics in 2016 when he won a seat in Seoul's Dongjak constituency, where he went on to serve three consecutive terms. Before his political career, he spent 26 years at the National Intelligence Service. Kim is widely recognized as a key pro-Lee Jae-myung figure within the party. He led the campaign team for then-candidate Lee during the 2022 presidential election and served as the party's senior deputy secretary-general from 2022 to 2024, during Lee's tenure as party chair. Kim gained national attention in 2023 for strongly defending Lee when the National Assembly voted on a motion to arrest him. At the time, he sharply criticized party members who supported the motion, saying, 'History will remember today as the day Democratic Party lawmakers became dogs.' In the lead-up to the 2024 general election, Kim served as secretary of the party's nomination committee, reportedly playing a key role in reorganizing the party's structure under pro-Lee leadership.


Korea Herald
3 days ago
- Korea Herald
North Korea ramps up anti-US indoctrination for students with new tactics
North Korea has introduced new methods to drill anti-US ideology into students in Pyongyang, including the establishment of anti-US exhibition halls, state media reports said Friday. Schools in Pyongyang have been "effectively conducting anti-imperialist and anti-American class education tailored to students' ages and psychological characteristics," the state-run Korean Central News Agency reported in a Korean-language dispatch. State media further explained that 'new educational methods are being actively explored and applied' at Jangsan Senior Middle School and Ryonghung Primary School in Pyongyang. At the schools, ideological education centers that 'show the aggressive nature of imperialists' have been set up, KCNA reported. Indoctrination is conducted regularly through such anti-US exhibitions so that 'the process of learning and daily life itself becomes a process of cultivating class consciousness.' Efforts are also being made to provide practical education through field visits at Ryomyong Senior Middle School in Pyongyang to 'arm the students with thorough anti-imperialist and anti-American class consciousness,' according to KCNA. 'Students are deeply imprinting the unchanging hostile view that the aggressive nature of enemies never changes and that illusions about the enemy mean death,' through visiting key places for class consciousness education and holding 'rallies to resolve revenge," state media reported. KCNA also noted that educators at Sinri Primary School in Pyongyang are using materials that show the 'tearful lives experienced by their grandparents' generation in the past, thereby increasing the effectiveness' of anti-US ideological education. Taedonggang Senior Middle School and other schools in Pyongyang 'have prepared students to become embodyers of passionate patriotism and firm class consciousness.' To that end, anti-US ideological materials are 'widely incorporated into teaching practice,' and exhibitions of paintings on anti-US themes are being held, KCNA added. The North Korean state media report came ahead of the 'month of anti-US joint struggle,' which the country designates as the period between June 25 and July 27. North Korea claims the Korean War broke out on June 25, followed by a US invasion, while celebrating July 27 as the 'Day of Victory in the Great Fatherland Liberation War.' North Korea has traditionally reinforced anti-American propaganda and sentiment during that period, though the level of anti-US messaging has varied depending on its ties with Washington. Pyongyang suspended anti-American events held during this month and toned down anti-US rhetoric from 2018 to 2021 in the wake of the first US-North Korea summit on June 12, 2018. However, the Kim Jong-un regime resumed politically charged events in 2022, including nationwide anti-American rallies and art exhibitions.


Korea Herald
3 days ago
- Korea Herald
N. Korea's damaged warship launched 22 days after failed first attempt
North Korea said Friday it has launched a 5,000-ton destroyer that was damaged during its first launch attempt in May, with leader Kim Jong-un attending the launching ceremony and unveiling a plan to build two more such destroyers next year. The launch ceremony was held at the Rajin shipyard the previous day, overseen by Kim, the Korean Central News Agency said, announcing the destroyer is named the Kang Kon. In late May, the 5,000-ton destroyer tipped over and became partially submerged during the launch ceremony in the northeastern port city of Chongjin. Kim had ordered the full restoration of the warship before a key party meeting set for late June. Kim met with scientists, technicians and workers who contributed to the destroyer's construction and restoration, the KCNA said. The KCNA also said Kim has approved a plan to build two more 5,000-ton destroyers next year. (Yonhap)