| Kim promises to push forward talks(China Daily)
 Updated: 2006-01-19 06:24
 
 
 Kim Jong-il, the top leader of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea 
(DPRK), pledged to push forward nuclear talks during his China trip, which was 
confirmed Wednesday after a week of media speculation. 
 
 
 
 
 |  President Hu Jintao 
 accompanies Kim Jong-il (right), the top leader of the Democratic People's 
 Republic of Korea, on a visit to the Crop Research Institute under the 
 Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences in Beijing on 
 Tuesday.[Xinhua]
 |  At a summit with President Hu Jintao, Kim said his country "will stick to the 
goal of denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula, and fulfil the joint statement 
issued in the fourth round of Six-Party Talks." 
 "The DPRK's stance on promoting Six-Party Talks remains unchanged," Kim was 
quoted by Xinhua as saying. 
 He said the DPRK is willing to work with China to overcome difficulties in 
the talks. 
 Kim's trip coincides with negotiators launching a flurry of diplomatic 
contacts to revive the Six-Party Talks, which began in 2003. 
 The other participants in the talks are the United States, the Republic of 
Korea, Japan and Russia. 
 The US envoy on the DPRK's nuclear programmes, Assistant Secretary of State 
Christopher Hill, met Chinese officials yesterday amid reports that he also had 
a meeting with his DPRK counterpart to revive the disarmament talks. Hill said 
no date has been set for resuming the talks. 
 Pyongyang agreed in September to give up its nuclear programme in exchange 
for aid and security assurances. But discussions have stalled since November 
after Washington imposed sanctions on the DPRK for alleged counterfeiting and 
other government-directed wrongdoing. 
 
 
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