US chief negotiator Christopher Hill on Wednesday night said all
concerned parties wanted to seek progress in the first phase of the
ongoing fifth round of the six-party talks on the Korean nuclear
issue, though it was scheduled to last only three days.
Hill made the remarks while briefing reporters at his hotel
after a dinner with Kim Kye-gwan, his counterpart from North
Korea.
On the first day of the current round, Hill said the involved
parties reviewed their positions at a plenary meeting in the
morning, adding that the US delegation had bilateral meetings with
all the other five delegations.
Hill told the reporters that a meeting of chief delegates is to
be convened on Thursday morning, to be followed by bilateral
consultations.
Asked about the Japanese delegation's proposal for setting up
working groups, Hill said it was a "good" one, but reiterated the
US stance, that the first track should be North Korea giving up its
nuclear programs, returning to the Non-Proliferation Treaty and
accepting IAEA inspectors.
The US chief negotiator also stressed the need to seek "clarity
of principles" in the three-day talks.
The Chinese delegation may propose a roadmap based on the
summarization of all parties' positions and concerns by the end of
the first phase, Hill said.
(Xinhua News Agency November 10, 2005)