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| South Korean Deputy Foreign Minister Song
Min-soon (C), Director-General of Japanese Foreign Ministry's Asia-Oceania
bureau Kenichiro Sasae (L) and U.S. Ambassador to Seoul Christopher Hill
join hands during a meeting in Seoul February 26, 2005. South Korean, U.S.
and Japanese negotiators met on Saturday to coordinate their stance in
dealing with North Korea's nuclear ambitions, their first meeting since
Pyongyang hinted it may be ready to return to negotiations. (Photo:
Reuters/Yahoo) |
SEOUL, Feb. 26 (Xinhuanet) -- Chief negotiators of South Korea, the United
States and Japan to the six-party talks aimed to resolve the nuclear issue on
the Korean Peninsula kicked off a one-day meeting Saturday for discussion to
find a breakthrough in the stalled diplomatic process.
"The three countries will analyze the outcome of Pyongyang visit by the
Chinese senior official Wang Jiarui and discuss how to persuade North Korea
(Democratic People's Republic of Korea) toreturn to the six-way talks as early
as possible," South Korean Yonhap News Agency quoted a source at the South
Korean Foreign Ministry as saying.
The three countries have usually met for such a strategy session to
coordinate their standings during the diplomatic process aimed to find solution
for the nuclear issue on the KoreanPeninsula.
The trilateral talks were held by South Korea's Deputy ForeignMinister Song
Min-soon, US Ambassador to South Korea Christopher Hill and Kenichiro Sasae,
chief of the Japanese Foreign Ministry'sAsia-Oceania bureau.
The three are scheduled to hold a briefing session on the result of the
talks later Saturday.
The DPRK announced on Feb. 10 that it was suspending participation in the
six-party nuclear talks indefinitely and for the first time admitted possessing
nuclear arms for self-defense.
Since August 2003, China, the United States, the DPRK, Russia, South Korea
and Japan have held three rounds of talks in Beijing aimed at peacefully
resolving the nuclear issue on the Korean Peninsula. Pyongyang refused to attend
the fourth round scheduled for last September, citing hostile US policy.
On Tuesday, the DPRK top leader Kim Jong Il was quoted as saying that the
DPRK never opposed six-party talks, but some "mature conditions" are needed to
continue the talks. Enditem |