US, Chinese, N.Korean envoys meet in Beijing
(AP) Updated: 2006-11-28 16:03
Top nuclear negotiators for China, the United States and North Korea met
Tuesday as part of a renewed diplomatic push to resume stalled six-nation talks
on North Korea's atomic weapons program.
China's Vice Foreign Minister
Wu Dawei, US Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill and North Korean Vice
Foreign Minister Kim Kye Gwan met after Kim arrived earlier Tuesday from
Pyongyang, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said.
She said
the talks were ongoing and did not give any details.
China hopes that
"relevant parties can have an in-depth exchange of ideas in order to promote the
early resumption of talks," Jiang said at a regular briefing.
Kim's trip
to Beijing - a rare overseas visit - and the presence of other
negotiators added to prospects of compromises to give new life to the talks,
which have been at an impasse for more than a year.
Officials have yet
to determine an exact date for the next round of negotiations, which also
involve Russia.
Kim said the timing "depends on the United States."
"There are too many outstanding issues" and both parties should narrow
their differences, Kim told reporters on arrival at the airport.
"I said
on October 31 that we can enter the talks at any time," he said. "I said that
because we can do that from a dignified position as we have taken defensive
measures through our nuclear test to counter sanctions and pressure against us."
An unannounced meeting between Hill and Kim last month in Beijing led to
Pyongyang agreeing to return to the arms negotiations amid heightened tensions
after its first nuclear test on October 9.
"The issue for us is to make
sure we are extremely well-planned and ready for the six-party talks, which we
do anticipate will get going at some point very soon," Hill said when he arrived
on Monday. Hill met separately with South Korea's nuclear envoy, Chun
Yung-woo, and Wu Tuesday morning, said Susan Stevenson, the spokeswoman for the
US Embassy in Beijing. She did not have any details on the talks.
Japan's representative Kenichiro Sasae told Japanese reporters that he
had also held bilateral talks with Wu and Hill.
North Korea agreed in
September 2005 to abandon its nuclear program in exchange for security
guarantees and aid. But Washington imposed financial sanctions against a
Macau-based bank on suspicions it was laundering counterfeit money for the North
Koreans. Angered by the move, Pyongyang withdrew from the talks two months
later.
Chun has said getting preparations right for progress at the
talks was more important than setting a date for restarting the negotiations.
"We will mainly focus on the procedure of the talks as it is essential
to accomplish substantial progress rather than talking just for the sake of
talking," he told reporters after arriving in Beijing on
Monday.
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