terus balik adem lg di 880

On Fri, Sep 4, 2009 at 9:52 AM, D0N Qicot <[email protected]> wrote:

>
>
> volume naik terus udah 3 hari belakangan nich...
> 940 jebol..terus kemana yach...?
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> regards,
>
>
> DonQicot
> DEWA gowes ke GoCeng !!
>
> ------------------------------
> *From:* dunia ini indah <[email protected]>
> *To:* [email protected]
> *Sent:* Friday, September 4, 2009 9:31:06 AM
> *Subject:* [ob] North Korea says uranium enrichment in final stage
>
>
>
>
>
> North Korea says uranium enrichment in final stage
>
> Published: Thursday, 3 Sep 2009
> http://news. yahoo.com/ s/ap/as_nkorea_ 
> nuclear<http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/as_nkorea_nuclear>
>
> SEOUL, South Korea – North Korea said Friday that it is in the final stages
> of enriching uranium, a process that could give the nation a second way to
> make nuclear bombs in addition to its known plutonium-based program.
>
> North Korea informed the U.N. Security Council it is forging ahead with its
> nuclear programs in defiance of international calls to abandon its atomic
> ambitions, the official Korean Central News Agency said in a report early
> Friday.
>
> The dispatch said plutonium "is being weaponized," and that uranium
> enrichment — a program North Korea revealed in recent months — was entering
> the "completion phase." Experts had long suspected that the North had a
> hidden uranium enrichment program, which would give the regime a second
> source of nuclear material.
>
> Uranium enrichment is a simpler method of building nuclear weapons than
> reprocessing plutonium, and it can be enriched in relatively inconspicuous
> factories that can better evade spy-satellite detection.
>
> A U.S. State Department spokesman said Thursday night that he had no
> immediate reaction to the North Korean announcement.
>
> A South Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman was not immediately available for
> comment.
>
> The North's announcement came a day after a U.S. special envoy arrived in
> Beijing for talks with Chinese officials on how to get North Korea back on
> track with its commitments to nuclear disarmament.
>
> Stephen Bosworth, the special envoy to North Korea, was to arrive in Seoul
> later Friday for similar consultations with South Korean officials before
> traveling to Tokyo on Sunday as part of an Asia tour amid recent
> conciliatory moves by Pyongyang.
>
> His visit to the region aims to "continue consultations with our partners
> and allies on how to best convince North Korea that it must live up to its
> obligations ... and take irreversible steps toward complete
> denuclearization, " the U.S. Embassy in Beijing said in a statement.
>
> North Korea called the decision to push ahead with its nuclear programs a
> reaction to the Security Council's moves to tighten sanctions against the
> regime for testing a nuclear bomb in May. The report called the resolution a
> "wanton violation of the DPRK's sovereignty and dignity." DPRK stands for
> the country's official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
>
> The North views its nuclear program as a security guarantee against what it
> claims is U.S. hostility and its alleged plans to attack Pyongyang.
>
> The U.S., China, Japan, Russia and South Korea have been negotiating with
> North Korea for years on dismantling its nuclear program in exchange for aid
> and other concessions.
>
> North Korea warned on Friday that it would be "left with no choice but to
> take yet stronger self-defensive countermeasures" if the Security Council
> continues the standoff, KCNA said without elaborating on what it meant by
> the countermeasures.
>
> Meanwhile, the North also said it has never objected to the
> denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula and left open possibility for
> dialogue with some permanent members of the Security Council, an apparent
> reference to the U.S.
>
> "We are prepared for both dialogue and sanctions," KCNA said.
>
> The North has long sought one-on-one negotiations with Washington on the
> nuclear program, hoping to raise its international profile. The U.S. has
> said it is willing to hold direct talks with Pyongyang but only on the
> sidelines of the six-nation disarmament talks.
>
> North Korea walked away from the talks earlier this year. North Korea also
> conducted its second nuclear test in May, drawing international condemnation
> and new U.N. sanctions.
>
> The North's move also came amid its conciliatory overtures to Seoul and
> Washington. The North freed two U.S. journalists and five South Koreans,
> including four fishermen, in recent weeks.
>
> The two Koreas also agreed to restart reunions of Korean family separated
> by the 1950-53 Korean War and restored regular traffic to a joint industrial
> park in the North.
>
>
>  
>

Kirim email ke