The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) announced Monday that six-party talks on the settlement of the nuclear issue would soon be held in Beijing.
"The six-party talks for a solution to the nuclear issue between the DPRK and the United States will be held in Beijing soon thanks to the former's initiative and peaceful efforts," a DPRK Foreign Ministry spokesman was quoted as saying by the Korean Central News Agency.
The DPRK and the United States said on Friday they had agreed to hold six-way talks on the nuclear stand-off.
The impasse arose in October when the United States claimed the DPRK had revived its nuclear arms program.
China, Japan, Russia and the Republic of Korea (ROK) will also attend the talks.
The timing and venue of the talks are yet to be formally announced.
The prospect of fresh negotiations comes after the United States and the DPRK met in the Chinese capital in April to break the impasse.
Pyongyang previously insisted on talking only to the United States, while Washington preferred a multilateral format to discuss the issue and demanded the DPRK dismantle its nuclear weapons programs first.
Piao Jianyi, executive director of the Centre for Korean Peninsula Issues Studies with the Institute of Asia-Pacific Studies, said the coming talks would be just a beginning and the process of resolving differences over the nuclear issue could last for "two or three years."
"Both sides (the DPRK and the United States) lack mutual trust so it is hard for them to reach 'substantive' agreement in a short time," Piao said.
However, the expert said the United States and the DPRK were likely to make some promises after "long and hard" negotiations.
(China Daily August 5, 2003)
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