A Republic of Korea (ROK) official said in Beijing Friday that
the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) delegation did not
"directly threaten to carry out nuclear test" during bilateral
talks with the United States delegation Thursday.
The ROK official told a press conference on condition of
anonymity.
The DPRK and US delegations had a two-hour bilateral meeting
Thursday afternoon following the second plenary session of the
third round of six-party talks, involving China, DPRK, the United
States, ROK, Russia and Japan, on the nuclear issue in the Korean
Peninsula.
This was the first bilateral meeting between the DPRK and US
delegations since the six-party talks began Wednesday.
During the DPRK-US meeting, the DPRK side threatened to test a
bomb if its conditions on freezing its nuclear program were not
accepted, according to the Associated Press, quoting a senior US
official in Washington.
The DPRK side talked about the "possibility" of future test, but
it's not a direct threat, the ROK official said.
Heads of the Chinese and DPRK delegations, Chinese Vice Foreign
Minister Wang Yi and his DPRK counterpart Kim Kye-gwan, held a
two-hour bilateral meeting Friday morning before the conference of
all the six delegation heads.
The six parties will discuss the final text of a document of
this round of talks Friday afternoon and the talks will conclude on
Saturday, the ROK official said.
(Xinhua News Agency June 25, 2004)