BEIJING - Six-nation talks aimed at convincing North Korea to give up its
nuclear program have begun, a South Korean official has said, just over two
months after Pyongyang conducted its first atomic test.
Top envoys join hands in Beijing before a dinner on the eve
of the resumption of Six-Party talks aimed at dismantling North Korea's
nuclear program. The talks, which involve the two Koreas, host China, the
United States, Japan and Russia, started in 2003 in an effort to stop the
DPRK acquiring nuclear weapons. From left to right are: South Korea's
Chung Yung-Woo; Japan's Kenichiro Sasae; USA's Christopher Hill; China's
Wu Dawei; North Korea's Kim Kye-Gwan; and Russia's Sergey Razov.
[AFP]
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The envoys from the six
nations involved -- host China, the two Koreas, the United States, Japan and
Russia -- met at 9.30 am (0130 GMT) on Monday to lay out the framework for the
discussions, the official said.
"The six-way contacts between the chief delegates started as scheduled," the
official, a member of the South Korean delegation who was at the Diaoyutai State
Guesthouse, where the meetings were being held, told AFP by phone.
An opening ceremony is due at 10:50 am (0250 GMT), after which the envoys
will gather for multilateral and bilateral meetings.
No time frame has officially been set for the talks, although some of the
envoys involved have indicated they could be over this week.
The talks are being held for the first time since North Korea conducted its
nuclear test on October 9, and following a 13-month suspension of the forum due
to anger in Pyongyang over US financial sanctions imposed against
it.