As the six delegations decided to carry the talks on the nuclear
issue of the Korean Peninsula into the fourth day, a Chinese
diplomat said there was hope that a multilateral document would
come out.
"Never lose hope for resolving the nuclear issue on the Korean
Peninsula," said Liu Jianchao, a member of the Chinese delegation
to the second round of the six-party talks, at a news briefing
Friday.
Lee Soo-Hyuck, who heads the Republic of Korea (ROK) team,
echoed Liu's comment, saying that deputy heads of the six
delegations are discussing a "common document" for the ongoing
talks.
The talks involve China, the Democratic People's Republic of
Korea (DPRK), the United States, the ROK, Russia and Japan.
"Even if a common document is not be endorsed," Liu said, "it
doesn't mean the talks are a failure."
"Substantive issues have been touched and all sides reaffirmed
that the issues should be resolved peacefully," said Liu, deputy
director-general of the Information Office of the Foreign
Ministry.
In response to the consistent US stance on CVID, a coinage for
"complete, verifiable and irreversible dismantling" of DPRK nuclear
weapons program, Liu said, China made it clear that the Korean
Peninsula should nuclear weapons-free in any form.
"The goal of CVID is the realization of a nuclear weapons-free
peninsula," Liu said, "but CVID itself is not enough."
Other sides also had their own stake, including "security
concerns" from the DPRK, Liu said.
"All those concerns should be addressed," said Liu, adding that
concerted and coordinated steps were needed.
He admitted that the alleged DPRK enriched uranium program was
discussed in the talks, but he refused to go into details.
"The gap is narrowed down and common ground increases," Liu
said.
He said China appreciated the sincerity, frankness and
pragmatism demonstrated at the ongoing talks.
"All sides made their own proposal for the setup of working
groups and the date of the next round talks," he said.
China hoped the six-party talks mechanism would continue, he
said, adding that preliminary arrangements for a next meeting would
come out after this round of talks.
(Xinhua News Agency February 28, 2004)