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China, US agree to strive for resumption of six-party talks
BEIJING—Chinese and US negotiators have agreed to work for an early
resumption of the six-party talks and to make concerted efforts for
progress, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said here Tuesday.
US Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill speaks as he leaves
from Beijing airport November 21, 2006. [Reuters] Jiang said Chinese
Vice Foreign Minister Wu Dawei met on Monday evening with US Assistant
Secretary of State Christopher Hill, making an in-depth exchange of
views on issues related to the six-party talks. The two sides agreed to
make joint efforts for the resumption and further progress of the talks,
Jiang said. Jiang said the exact date of resumption had yet to be
decided.
“We are still negotiating the date with parties concerned,” said the
spokeswoman. A spokesperson of the US embassy in Beijing said Hill
believed the talks would probably be resumed in mid-December. “I believe
we will have six-party talks, probably in the middle of December, but
what is important for us is that they be well planned,” Hill was quoted
as saying.
Analysts interpreted Hill’s whirlwind trip to Beijing as an “important
preparatory” visit for the early resumption of six-party talks, which
focused more on the details of the talks, including a specified
timetable. The current progress was closely related to a flurry of
diplomatic activities, said Ruan Zongze, a senior research fellow at the
China Institute of International Studies. It also showed that the
international community had sensed the urgency of addressing the Korean
Peninsular nuclear issue.
“On the one hand, parties concerned would like to adopt a more
responsible and substantial attitude; on the other hand, they realize
that the issue should not dragged out, or it will be trickier to
resolve,” Ruan said. Though uncertainties still exist before the
resumption of the six-party talks, the talks were an “irreplaceable and
practical” choice to solve the issue, said Shi Yuanhua, a researcher on
Korean studies at Fudan University in Shanghai. Jiang also denied
earlier reports suggesting that Beijing had unfrozen some of the
Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) accounts in a Macao bank.
She said the financial sanctions had been carried out by Macao, not
Beijing.
On the possibility of DPRK chief negotiator Kim Kye Gwan visiting China
and his Chinese counterpart Wu Dawei visiting Pyongyang, Jiang said,
“That is only speculation.” The six-party talks, involving China, the
DPRK, the United States, the Republic of Korea, Russia and Japan, are
aimed at finding a solution to the Korean peninsula nuclear issue.
—The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item |