Special report: Iran Nuclear
Crisis
BEIJING, June 8 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Foreign Minister
Li Zhaoxing met here Thursday with visiting Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas
Araghchi, exchanging views on current situation of the Iran nuclear issue.
Both Li and Araghchi agreed that the Iran nuclear
issue should be solved through diplomatic negotiation.
Chinese Assistant Foreign Minister Cui Tiankai held
talks with Araghchi on Thursday.
China on Thursday called for positive response to the
proposals agreed by the five U.N. Security Council permanent members and Germany
on solution to the Iran nuclear issue.
"We hope the proposals will receive positive response
from all the parties concerned so that negotiations will be resumed soon,"
Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao told a news briefing, describing the
proposals as an "important foundation" for the issue's solution.
Meanwhile, Liu confirmed at the briefing that Iran's
President Mahmud Ahmadinejad will come to China to attend the Shanghai
Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit slated for June 15 in Shanghai.
Iran, together with Mongolia, Pakistan and India, are
SCO observers.
Liu said Hu Jintao will hold bilateral meetings with
the presidents of the SCO member states and observers on the sidelines of the
summit, including Ahmadinejad.
The spokesman said China had discussed Iran's nuclear
issue with the country in the past and will continue to do so in the future to
improve mutual understanding.
"China will continue to make positive efforts to help
peacefully solve the Iran nuclear issue through negotiations," Liu said.
European Union (EU) foreign policy chief Javier
Solana went to Tehran on Monday to present to Iran a package of incentives,
which was agreed last week among the five U.N. Security Council permanent
members, Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States, plus Germany, in
exchange for Iran's suspension of uraniumenrichment.
Details of the proposals are unknown, but EU
diplomats said they included a light-water nuclear reactor and a foreign supply
of atomic fuel for Iran, as well as an offer to suspend sanctions against Iran
in the UN Security Council.
The proposals also carry penalties that can be
applied by the United Nations Security Council if Tehran does not cooperate,
said the diplomats, according to earlier reports. Enditem