Just six days ahead the long-expected second round of six-way
talks on the Korean Peninsula nuclear issue, Chinese Foreign
Ministry spokeswoman Zhang Qiyue said China hopes the talks will go
smoothly and make substantial progress.
At a regular press conference in Beijing Thursday, Zhang said
substantial issues will be discussed during the talks, and the
heads of the delegations to the talks have been fixed.
The talks, to begin on Feb. 25, involve China, the Democratic
People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), the United States, the Republic
of Korea (ROK), Russia and Japan.
Zhang said Vice Foreign Minister Wang Yi will head the Chinese
delegation to the talks.
According to information provided by related parties, the heads
of the other five delegations are Kim Kye-gwan, deputy foreign
minister of the DPRK, Mitoji Yabunaka, director-general of the
Asian and Oceanian Affairs Bureau of the Japanese Foreign Ministry,
Lee Soo-Hyuck, the ROK's deputy minister of foreign affairs and
trade, Alexander Losiukov, Russian deputy foreign minister, and
James Kelly, assistant secretary of state for East Asian and
Pacific affairs of the United States.
Zhang said the parties concerned expect to fix the consensus
reached so far in written form, which depends on the progress of
the talks.
The second round of six-party talks is a key step toward
resolving the nuclear issue through dialogue, said Zhang, adding
that the parties concerned should continue to show sincerity and
participate in the talks on the basis of mutual respect and
consultations on an equal footing.
China believes that the six-party talks mechanism will be
conducive to maintaining the peace and stability of the peninsula
and realizing a nuclear-free peninsula, said Zhang. China has made
a lot of efforts to start the second round of talks, the
spokeswoman added.
The international community, including the United Nations, the
European Union and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, has
also played an active role in reopening the new talks, said
Zhang.
Regarding the issue of abduction of Japanese citizens to the
DPRK, Zhang said that the issue, which involves the DPRK and Japan,
should be handled properly through bilateral channels.
The fresh round of the talks is scheduled to begin Feb. 25 in
Beijing. The first round of the six-party talks lasted three days
from Aug. 27 to 29, 2003.
(Xinhua News Agency February 20, 2004)