|
China says nuclear-free peninsula remains goal
Beijing(China)—China pledged
yesterday to stick to the goal of a nuclear-free Korean Peninsula and
push for the resumption of the Six-Party Talks at an early date.
Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing said all participants to the talks share
the objective of achieving denuclearization as well as permanent peace
and stability on the peninsula.
“China will work with other sides to move closer to that goal step by
step and finally realize it,” he told reporters on the sidelines of a
meeting at the Great Hall of the People.
Li’s remarks were China’s first official comments following an
announcement late on Tuesday by the Foreign Ministry that Beijing,
Washington and Pyongyang agreed to resume the six-way talks in the near
future.
But there are some worries whether the talks would lead to the goal of
denuclearizing the peninsula after the Democratic People’s Republic of
Korea (DPRK) conducted a nuclear test on October 9.
Li, however, stressed that the three nations’ agreement to restart the
talks was based on the progress made at the Six-Party Talks in September
last year. Pyongyang then committed to scrapping its nuclear programmes
in return for energy aid and other benefits.
The negotiations, which also involve Russia, the Republic of Korea (ROK)
and Japan, have been stalled since last November because of Pyongyang’s
boycott in protest of sanctions by Washington for its alleged money
laundering and other illicit financial activities.
Confirming the planned renewal of the talks yesterday, the DPRK Foreign
Ministry said Pyongyang decided to return to the table “on the premise
that the issue of lifting financial sanctions will be discussed and
settled between the DPRK and the US within the framework of the
Six-Party Talks.” But it did not say whether it remained committed to
its earlier agreement to abandon its nuclear ambitions.
—The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item |