Chinese senior diplomat Wang Yi said in Beijing Saturday that
the disputes among all parties participating in the third round of
six-party talks on the nuclear issue in the Korean Peninsula were
narrowed.
Wang, chairman of the third round of six-party talks, Chinese
delegation head and vice foreign minister, made the remarks at a
press conference after the closing of this round of talks.
The nuclear issue faced two difficulties currently: one is the
scope and measures of nuclear abandonment, the other is the scope
of corresponding measures of the nuclear freeze, Wang said.
All parties, especially the Democratic People's Republic of
Korea (DPRK) and the United States, had serious differences on
these problems, he said, noting that the disputes were narrowed in
this round of the six-party talks.
On the issue of nuclear abandonment, the US side put forward for
the first time that the DPRK could give up all nuclear projects
permanently, comprehensively and transparently, and the DPRK
advanced for the first time to abandon all nuclear weapons and
relevant projects transparently, Wang said. This showed that
attitudes of the two sides began to go closer.
On the issue of nuclear freeze, the DPRK stated clearly that
freezing was the first step toward abandonment, and it was willing
to accept investigation on this problem, Wang said.
China, Russia, the Republic of Korea and Japan all agreed to
take measures simultaneously to solve the concerns of the DPRK, and
the United States also expressed its willingness to study DPRK's
requirements, Wang said.
"The other side of difficulty is hope, and the process to solve
difficulties is the process to realize hopes," said Wang. "There is
no difficulty that cannot be solved, no hopes cannot be realized,
if we persevere in our talks."
(Xinhua News Agency June 26, 2004)