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BEIJING, Nov. 9 (Xinhuanet) -- The main task of
the fifth-round six-party Korean Peninsula nuclear talks, which began here
Wednesday morning, is "to outline details, ways and procedures for the
implementation of the joint statement adopted in September," said the Chinese
chief negotiator.

The task should be fulfilled in line with the principle of "commitment to
commitment and action to action," said Wu Dawei, also Chinese vice foreign
minister, at the opening session of the talks.
In the joint statement, adopted at the fourth round
of the six-party talks which ended in September, the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea (DPRK) agreed to abandon all its nuclear weapons and existing
nuclear programs in exchange for energy aid and security guarantees.
"I hope the parties concerned could continue to
participate in consultations in an earnest, responsible, flexible and pragmatic
attitude so as to seek solutions acceptable to all parties as early as
possible," said Wu.
Wu said the publication of the joint statement
demonstrated the political will and commitment of all parties, and signaled the
talks entered a new stage.
Wu suggested the fifth round be carried out in
phases: the delegation heads of the six nations first table a general scenario
and a working group or expert panel works out detailed rules and submit them to
the delegation heads for consultations.
At the plenary meeting after the opening ceremony,
all delegation heads expressed their stances and opinions on how to implement
the joint statement, according to sources with the Chinese delegation.
They agreed that with the talks entering a
substantial phase of"action to action," all the parties concerned face a more
complicated and more arduous task and thus should take a serious attitude to
earnestly fulfill the commitments they made in the joint statement.
However, the US side claimed the DPRK should first
abandon its nuclear program and create a nuclear-free Korea Peninsula, then
other issues could be discussed.
"When the DPRK is back to the Treaty on the
Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons with the IAEA safeguards, at an appropriate
time we'll have a discussion about the subject of the provision of light water
reactor," US chief negotiator Christopher Hill told reporters Wednesday morning.
On the possible DPRK-US bilateral meetings during the
current talks, Hill said many two-way discussions would be held and it is likely
for them to meet with the DPRK counterparts.
"I look forward to hearing from the Chinese
delegation on how they assess the negotiations," Hill added.
Hill's ROK counterpart Song Min-soon appealed all
parties to have patience as the path is still "open" for all sides to implement
the joint statement through consultations.
The fifth-round talks will lay the groundwork for the
parties concerned to carry out the first joint statement, he said, adding that
in the coming three days, all the parties will exchange views and consult with
each other on this issue.
Song admitted that differences exist among the
parties, but all sides will find out ways to narrow the differences.
Sasae Kenichiro, Japan's chief negotiator, also
called on all parties to voice their respective stances on how to implement the
joint statement reached in September.
Japan will "actively voice its opinions in detail,"
Sasae Kenichiro told reporters when leaving the hotel Wednesday morning.
He hoped the DPRK could implement the September
landmark agreement in real earnest.
The six-party talks involve China, the DPRK, the
United States,the Republic of Korea, Russia and Japan.
China has hosted four rounds of the six-party talks since August 2003. Enditem
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