Amid growing common ground, negotiators at the six-party talks
on the Korean Peninsula nuclear issue will continue their
efforts until the weekend.
"It is necessary to continue the process of the six-party talks
for there are still differences, difficulties and contradictions
among different sides," Wang Yi, China's chief negotiator was
quoted by a Chinese foreign ministry spokesman on Friday as
saying.
Hints from different sources indicated that this round of talks
will last at least until Saturday.
Liu Jianchao, spokesman of Chinese Foreign Ministry, told
reporters after the third day of discussion that no date has been
set to end the talks.
However, Republic of Korea (ROK) delegation head Lee Soo-Hyuck
said the six parties were trying to wrap up the talks on
Saturday.
A source from the US embassy in China said the US delegation
will stay on until the end.
Meanwhile, the Japanese delegation issued a notice Friday noon
saying that Japan is "making efforts in close collaboration with
China for the success of six-party talks."
The first round of six-party talks held in August involving the
same nations -- China, Democratic People's Republic of Korea
(DPRK), the United States, ROK, Russia and Japan, lasted for only
three days.
This time, all parties left an open-ended timetable with hopes
of striving for more progress, analysts said.
The approach seems to be working.
Wang, who hosts the talks, described Friday's meeting as "active
and beneficial", said Liu.
During Friday's talks, all sides made their own proposal for the
setup of working group and the date for the next round of the
talks, Liu said.
US Secretary of State Colin Powell said on Thursday at a Senate
hearing that the results of the first two days' meetings were
positive and expressed hopes the talks will move in the right
direction.
ROK President Roh Moo-hyun said on Friday that he hoped the
talks would reach a peaceful solution to the nuclear issue on the
Korean Peninsula.
"Our best efforts have been made to help find a peaceful
solution to the DPRK nuclear issue, and most problems have either
been overcome or are moving toward solutions," Roh said at an
international conference at a Seoul hotel.
"Still, some problems remain, but solutions are taking shape,
and hope is in sight," Roh was quoted by Yonhap News
Agency.
Meanwhile, despite stark disagreements highlighted by the talks,
observers were cautiously optimistic that the parties will move
beyond a basic agreement to continue negotiations.
DPRK put forward a proposal to comprehensively stop nuclear
activities on Thursday which was applauded by all sides, according
to source from Chinese foreign ministry.
But a DPRK official pointed Thursday night at the United States'
hard-line stance that Pyongyang should first abandon its nuclear
programs before getting any compensation.
Liu said on Friday that China maintains that the Korean
peninsula should have no nuclear weapon in any form.
He stressed the US delegation's consistent stance calls for
"complete, verifiable and irreversible dismantling" of the DPRK's
nuclear programs.
But Liu said China hopes to take things one step further.
China's stance is based on the country's desire to address all the
concerns of the six parties, Liu said. Not least of them are "the
security concerns" of DPRK.
Diplomats in Asia described the tone of the second round of
talks as "calm and constructive".
The United States and DPRK have also held one-on-one meetings
during each of the first two days as well as participating in group
discussions.
On Friday, the six sides also exchanged views on the
establishment of working groups to push for a resolution of the
standoff which erupted in October 2002 when US officials said DPRK
had admitted to reviving a programme to produce atomic weapons.
(Xinhua News Agency February 28, 2004)