Delegates to the six-party talks on the Korean nuclear issue
wrapped up their ninth day of discussions on Wednesday night and
agreed to continue the talks today.??
No ending date has been set so far for the record-long
fourth-round negotiations, while the draft joint statement, which
has been revised for three times, was yet to be accepted by all the
parties.
"I have no good news, neither bad news nor frightening news to
report," US chief negotiator Christopher Hill told reporters at the
hotel gate yesterday evening after a lengthy bilateral consultation
with the Chinese delegation.
Hill said the US side has no plan to hold more bilateral
consultations with the North Korean delegation today.
Piao Jianyi, a professor with the Asian-Pacific Institute of the
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said that the talks might end
today if all parties concerned could be persuaded to accept the
draft document.
Jin Linbo, head of the Asia-Pacific Office under the China
Research Institute of International Studies, said the talks would
possibly conclude or take a recess within this week.
Jin believed that the process depends on the attitude of the US
and said that there is still time for the participants to seek a
solution.
The Korean Peninsula nuclear talks, involving China, the US,
Russia, Japan, North and South Korea, resumed on July 26 after a
13-month impasse.
Over the past nine days, the six parties have held frequent
bilateral and multilateral consultations.
Japanese delegation head Kenichiro Sasae said yesterday
afternoon that the six parties were still striving for reaching a
consensus.
Sasae told reporters the six delegations to the ongoing talks
continued to make revisions to and coordinate their stances on the
latest draft of a common document during yesterday's negotiation,
with China serving as the key coordinator.
A series of one-on-one contacts were made yesterday for the
negotiators to exchange views on the latest draft common document,
which is aimed at establishing a framework for future talks on the
eventual settlement of the nuclear issue.
Earlier reports said a chief delegates' session, planned for
yesterday afternoon, was canceled, which observers say may indicate
the failure to make a "final comment" on the draft document.
Hill said yesterday morning that the latest draft document
"narrowed differences" among all sides, and that an agreement could
be possibly reached.
He said that the draft, presented by the Chinese delegation, was
"really designed to narrow the differences and maybe even get to
the point where we can really agree on something."
It should be the last version for the common document as the six
delegations would make a "final comment" on the latest fourth draft
yesterday, he said.
According to Hill, the negotiators "are really getting close to
the end of this round" of the nuclear talks.
The North Korean delegation, in its first open statement on the
current talks on Tuesday afternoon, admitted differences existed
between it and the US.
North Korean delegation head Kim Kye-gwan said that his
delegation had hours of consultations with the US delegation over
past days.
"Though there are disagreements between the two, we wish to be
able to minimize the differences and achieve a result in the
talks," he said.
Kim, also vice foreign minister, reiterated his country's stance
that Pyongyang's abandonment of its nuclear weapons and nuclear
weapons programs depends on whether the US removes its nuclear
threat against the North and establishes mutual trust with
Pyongyang.
The North Korean delegation remained silent yesterday.
(Xinhua News Agency August 4, 2005)