Special report: Six-party talks - 3rd phase
of 5th round
BEIJING, Feb. 7 (Xinhua) -- Five chief negotiators
involved in the Korean nuke issue on Wednesday held intensive meetings to pave
the way for the six-party talks that will resume in Beijing on Thursday
afternoon.
"Chief Chinese negotiator Wu Dawei held one-on-one
talks with his counterparts from the Democratic People's Republic of Korea
(DPRK), the United States, the Republic of Korea (ROK) and Japan," sources with
the Chinese Foreign Ministry said, without releasing more details.
The flurry of diplomatic consultations came
immediately after the four foreign envoys arrived in Beijing on Wednesday.
"This is a very important session," top U.S. envoy
Christopher Hill told reporters at the Beijing airport. "We all know what we
need to accomplish, and we all hope for success."
The last phase of talks recessed in December last
year after five days of negotiations which produced no breakthrough.
Launched in 2003, the talks involve China, the DPRK,
the United States, the ROK, Japan and Russia.
"I want to emphasise that real success will occur
when we complete the September '05 agreement -- not just when we start
(implementing) the '05 agreement," Hill said.
Chief Japanese representative Kenichiro Sasae was on
the same plane as Hill.
"Japan will play a constructive role in helping the
talks achieve progress," Sasae said at the hotel.
"The upcoming talks must produce a turning point on
the DPRK's commitment to denuclearization," top ROK envoy Chun Yung Woo told
reporters.
Russian representative Alexander Losyukov, who was
the first negotiator to arrive in Beijing Wednesday morning, said Russia will
propose working panels during the talks.
Hill and DPRK envoy Kim Kye-Gwan had a rare
one-on-one talk in Berlin last month, which was seen as a helpful step in
resuming the new round of six-party negotiations.
"The upcoming talks will focus on exploring initial
steps in implementing the joint statement," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman
Jiang Yu told the regular briefing on Tuesday.
Under the joint statement reached in September 2005,
the DPRK agreed to abandon its nuclear program in exchange for economic aid and
security guarantees.
"Apart from plenary sessions, chief negotiators will
hold group meetings and one-on-one talks," Jiang said.
As host, China is counting on all parties to make
concerted efforts to produce positive results, the spokesperson said.
Chief DPRK envoy Kim Kye-Gwan will arrive in Beijing
Thursday morning.