Chief US negotiator Christopher Hill said in Beijing Wednesday
it is possible to reach an agreement for the six-party talks on
Korean Peninsula nuclear issue, but the detailed differences remain
ahead.
"We consider the fourth draft to be a very excellent basis for
reaching the goals of principles that will guide us to the eventual
agreement," said Hill when he left his hotel.
The six parties, China, North Korea, US, South Korea, Russia and
Japan, reconvened the second phase of the fourth round on Tuesday,
fixing on "substantial discussion" Wednesday.
The fourth draft of a common document proposed by China during
the first phase meeting starting late July remained the focus of
the talks, while all parties consider it a good basis for
agreement.
"Though we don't have any strong problems with the fourth draft,
how North Korea reacts to the fourth draft is something we have to
see today," said Hill.
"That's why we consider it's an important day," said Hill. "We
both reiterated our desire to reach an agreement in the session,
but the devil would be the detail."
According to Hill, the US delegation is scheduled to hold
one-on-one contact separately with Japan, Russia, South Korea and
North Korea on the second day of the talks.
The stumbling block was whether Pyongyang is allowed for the
right to have a civilian nuclear program. North Korea insisted on
the right while US wanted full dismantlement of its nuclear
program. The five-week recess seems unable to soften their
stances.
"North Korea has the right on peaceful nuclear activity. This
right is neither awarded nor needs to be approved by others," the
North Korean delegation head Kim Gye-gwan told Xinhua in Pyongyang
on Tuesday before traveling to Beijing for the talks.
"We have this right, and the more important thing is that we
should use this right," Kim stressed, adding that "if US tries to
set obstacle to the North Korea's using this right, we can utterly
not accept that."
China chaired a chief delegates' meeting in the Diaoyutai State
Guesthouse on Tuesday afternoon, indicating the formal restart of
the talks.
While addressing the plenary meeting, Chinese delegation chief
Wu Dawei urged the parties concerned to seek a balanced and win-win
solution through flexible, pragmatic and constructive consultations
so that the talks can make progress.
The first three rounds of six-party talks ended inconclusively.
The fourth round began in late July and then went into 5-week
recess.
(Xinhua News Agency September 14, 2005)