Top Chinese envoy to the six-party talks Wu Dawei said in Beijing
yesterday that the current round of talks had recessed and would restart soon.
Wu made the remarks at a press briefing after a just-concluded chief
delegates meeting.
He said in a Chairman's Statement that the parties listened to reports by the
five working groups, and conducted discussions on implementing the initial
actions and an action plan for the next phase.
The parties agreed that they will continue to advance the process of the
six-party talks, and reaffirmed that they will faithfully carry out their
commitments in the Sept. 19 joint statement and the Feb. 13 joint document, the
statement said.
According to the Feb. 13 deal, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea
(DPRK) shall shut down its nuclear facilities while the other parties shall
provide emergency energy assistance to it and the shipment will commence within
the next 60 days.
The statement said the parties will resume the talks at the earliest
opportunity to continue to discuss and formulate an action plan for the next
phase.
As for the frozen funds issue, which is a major block for the current round
of talks, Wu said the transfer of DPRK's funds is an unexpected problem, and all
sides are striving to find a solution.
The current problem is who will handle the money, he said, adding the Chinese
government has to discuss with the Bank of China (BOC) whether the bank will
take it.
The BOC has its own concerns and the government should help it solve them, he
said.
The United States on March 19 agreed to transfer DPRK's 25 million U.S.
dollars frozen at Macao-based Banco Delta Asia (BDA) to a DPRK account at the
BOC in Beijing.
Chun Yung Woo, chief negotiator of the Republic of Korea (ROK),told reporters
that the funds issue will not impose influence on the parties' implementation of
the two joint documents, since knot of the funds issue is in technical sphere
instead of political sphere.
The six parties settled the framework of solution to the funds issue during
the discussion, but to solve the technical problems would still take time, he
said.
A 50-minute chief envoy meeting was held Thursday afternoon, in which the
DPRK said it will implement the Feb. 13 deal if the funds issue is solved, Chun
said.
US chief delegate Christopher Hill was cautiously optimistic about the
prospect, saying the talks process was still on track. However, he wanted to see
"much more in-depth discussion in the next phase".
He said he hoped the declaration and disablement of DPRK's nuclear facilities
could be done by the end of 2007 and there could be a precise timing on the
disablement of the facilities.
"Even with the delay of the technical banking issue, it is our strong view
that there is still long schedule to meet all the 60-day requirements," Hill
said. He will leave Beijing on Friday.
Hill said he believed all sides could arrange a time schedule for the next
round of talks.