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A new missile is carried during a mass military parade at the
Kim Il Sung Square in Pyongyang, North Korea.APNorth Korea is nearing completion
of a light-water reactor that is primarily intended to generate electricity
but which could add to concern over its nuclear program, a U.S.-based
institute said Wednesday.Satellite photos, the latest taken this month,
show the North appears to be putting finishing external touches to the
reactor at its Yongbyon nuclear complex, according to 38 North, the website
of the U.S.-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International
Studies in Washington. The reactor could potentially begin operation within
a year or so, although considerable technical hurdles remain, 38 North says
in its analysis.Light-water reactors are best-suited for electricity generation,
and U.S. academics who visited the site in 2010 when construction of
the reactor began said it appeared designed for that purpose. It might
be adapted to produce plutonium for weapons, but North Korea already has
what's known as a gas-graphite reactor, which provides an easier option
for making bomb fuel.North Korea announced in early April it was restarting
the older reactor from which it is estimated to have derived enough
plutonium for a half-dozen bombs before it was shuttered in 2007 during
aid-for-disarmament negotiations. The announcement came amid a torrent of
war threats from Pyongyang after the U.N. Security Council tightened
NAIROBI, Kenya A decision by extremists Islamist militants to ban food
aid and international donors numb to a series of unfolding disasters made
south-central Somalia the most dangerous place in the world to be a
child in 2011.The first in-depth scientific study of famine deaths in Somalia
in 2011 was released Thursday. It estimates 133,000 children under age 5
died, with child death rates approaching 20 percent in some communities.That's
133,000 under-5 deaths out of an estimated 9.3 million people. That compares
to 65,000 under-5 deaths in all other industrial countries in the world,
a combined population of 990 million, according to Chris Hillbruner, a senior
food security adviser at FEWS NET, a famine warning agency.The Associated
Press earlier reported Monday on the overall findings of the report.
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