The resumed six-party talks entered the third day on Thursday.
The following are newly-stated positions of the delegations of
China, North Korea, the US, South Korea and
Japan.
The Chinese delegation:
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said Thursday that
China will, as before, hold in-depth consultations with concerned
parties with a positive and pragmatic attitude.
Qin said the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula is a
complex issue and requires both patience and
flexibility.
The North Korean delegation:
The North Korean delegation spokesman Hyun Hak Bong said
Thursday that the major stumbling block to the talks is the issue
of providing a light-water reactor.
"Providing a light-water reactor is a matter of building trust,"
said Hyun, adding it is "a problem related to the US' political
will to give up its hostile policy towards North
Korea."
The US delegation:
Chief US negotiator Christopher Hill has rejected North Korea's
demand for a light-water nuclear reactor, saying that the issue was
not included in the fourth draft of a common document.
"The light-water reactor for us is a non-starter," Hill said
Thursday.
On Wednesday night, he made it clear that neither the US nor any
other party is prepared to fund the construction of a light-water
reactor.
The South Korean delegation:
South Korean Foreign Minister Ban Ki-moon said Thursday in New
York that South Korea believes that all parties share the goal of
the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula.
He said North Korea must abandon all nuclear weapons and
programs and return to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)
and accept the inspection of the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA).
Meanwhile, North Korea should have the right to the peaceful use
of nuclear power after it regains trust from the international
community, he said.
The Japanese delegation:
Japanese chief negotiator Kenichiro Sasae said Thursday that
North Korea should give up all its nuclear weapons and programs and
North Korea's demand for a light-water reactor is unacceptable.
Sasae said that if concerned parties cannot agree on the
light-water reactor issue, it is very hard to reach a common
document.
The second delegation heads' meeting held Thursday was a "very
difficult" meeting and the stances between concerned parties
remained "far apart," he
added.
The Russian delegation:
Russian delegation head Alexander Alexeyev has maintained that
North Korea has the right to peaceful nuclear utilization.
Before coming for the talks, Alexeyev said in Moscow that North
Korea can expect cooperation from other countries on nuclear energy
if it returns to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, the
JoongAng Ilbo daily newspaper of South Korea reported.
(Xinhua News Agency September 16, 2005)