US, N.Korean envoys to meet again in Beijing
(AP) Updated: 2006-11-29 08:49
The top US and North Korean nuclear negotiators were expected to hold a
second round of meetings Wednesday, the US State Department said, amid a
diplomatic push to resume six-nation talks on Pyongyang's atomic weapons
program.
US Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill met Tuesday in
Beijing with North Korean Vice Foreign Minister Kim Kye Gwan and Chinese Vice
Foreign Minister Wu Dawai.
US State Department spokesman Sean McCormack
said Tuesday in Washington that Hill and Kim plan to hold talks again Wednesday.
"You want to make sure that everybody, at least, has a good, solid
understanding of what might happen" when six-nation talks aimed at persuading
the North to abandon its nuclear weapons reconvene, McCormack said.
"What Chris did today (Tuesday) was to start to provide information on
how we might be able to define what is an effective round of the six-party talks
that produces concrete results," he said.
According to South Korea's
Yonhap news agency, Hill "stressed that the North needs to report all of its
nuclear programs before seeking economic incentives."
On his part, Kim
insisted that Washington lift its financial sanctions on Pyongyang and "take
steps to help normalize relations between the two enemies," Yonhap said.
North Korea agreed in September 2005 to abandon its nuclear program in
exchange for security guarantees and aid. But Washington imposed the 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.
Kim said before Tuesday's meetings got started
that the timing of the next round of six-party talks on his country's nuclear
program "depends on the United States."
"There are too many outstanding
issues" and both parties should narrow their differences, Kim told reporters.
Officials have yet to determine an exact date for the next round of
negotiations. The China-hosted talks involve the United States, North Korea,
Japan, South Korea and Russia, which has not sent an envoy to Beijing.
"We hope all sides can grasp this opportunity and take a flexible,
pragmatic, and constructive approach in order to realize the early resumption of
six-party talks," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu 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.
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.
Hill
told reporters when he arrived Monday that the US anticipated that the talks
would "get going at some point very soon."
Hill also met separately with
South Korea's nuclear envoy, Chun Yung-woo, and Wu earlier Tuesday, 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 also had bilateral talks with Wu and
Hill.
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