Nuclear talks round nears end
19/9/2005 7:40
The latest round of six-party talks on Korean nuclear issues will continue
today, but it is nearing an end, Chinese delegation spokesman Liu Jianchao said
in Beijing yesterday. Liu did not provide a timetable on when the talks may
wrap up. Chief US negotiator Christopher Hill, however, said he expects to
leave the discussions this afternoon. Hill said last night that the latest
version of a joint statement drafted by China represents a "great opportunity"
for the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. Hill said the draft is "an
effort to bridge the remaining differences," which he believed are "difficult
but certainly not insurmountable." North Korea maintains the right to operate
a civilian nuclear power program and wants America to supply it with a
light-water reactor in exchange for giving up atomic weapons efforts - requests
Washington has denied. The six chief negotiators - representing North Korea,
the United States, China, South Korea, Russia and Japan - exchanged views on the
draft joint statement at two meetings of the delegation chiefs
yesterday. "There is still a possibility of reaching an agreement,'' Japanese
chief negotiator Sasae Kenichiro said yesterday afternoon as he returned to his
hotel. Hill said yesterday morning that differences over the wording of the
draft remained. "The issue is how we express the elements in the text," said
Hill, adding that the US delegation prefers a less ambiguous statement. "But
we are trying to work with it, and we are really trying to reach something with
it. We are setting principles, but agreeing on general principles doesn't mean
you create ambiguities and lead the way to confusion and problems in the
future." China submitted its new draft on Friday, setting out the DPRK's
right to a civilian nuclear program and a light-water reactor, according to
Russian negotiator Alexander Alexeyev. If accepted, the document would be the
first of its kind since the talks began in 2003.
Xinhua news
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