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Learn Chinese - N.Korea talks resume amid report of US deal

WORLD / Asia-Pacific

N.Korea talks resume amid report of US deal

(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-02-08 09:43

EIJING - Six-party talks aimed at dismantling N.Korea's nuclear program
start in Beijing on Thursday, with a Japanese newspaper reporting that
DPRK has already signed a memorandum with the US.

US Assistant Secretary of State and chief negotiator Christopher Hill
speaks to journalists upon arriving for the six-party talks in Beijing,
February 7, 2007. [Reuters]

Participants have played down hopes of an immediate settlement of the
protracted standoff, which took a higher profile around the world when
the DPRK staged its first test atomic blast in October, prompting UN
sanctions.

But Japan's Asahi Shimbun newspaper said North Korea and the United
States signed a memorandum in Berlin last month in which Pyongyang agreed
to move toward shutting down its nuclear reactor in exchange for aid.

It called for simultaneous steps to be taken, with Pyongyang moving
within weeks to freeze its nuclear reactor at Yongbyon and agreeing to
accept inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency, the United
Nations nuclear watchdog.

In return, the United States expressed support for providing energy and
humanitarian aid, although no details were given on the amount of aid and
what it might consist of, the Asahi said.

Asked to comment on the report, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack
said in Washington: "We had a good set of consultations in Berlin with
the North Koreans as well as with our other partners in the six-party
talks prior to the commencement of this round."

He declined to comment further.

Negotiators from the two Koreas, the United States, Japan, Russia and
host China gather later on Thursday at a secluded compound in western
Beijing where they will turn their attention to a 2005 statement offering
North Korea economic and security concessions in return for abandoning
its nuclear weapons ambitions.

"I want to emphasize that the real success is when we complete the
September 05 agreement," chief US negotiator Christopher Hill told
reporters in Beijing on Wednesday.

"Not just when we start the 05 agreement, but when we finish it, so we're
not going to finish that this week. We'll just maybe take a good first
step."

South Korea's envoy Chun Yung-woo said that after much negotiation it was
time for results, and he urged compromise.

"North Korea must be prepared to show, in actions, its commitment for
denuclearisation and must not make unreasonable demands, and the other
five countries must not be ungenerous or hesitant in taking rational
corresponding measures," Chun told reporters.

These talks are likely to focus on persuading North Korea to first freeze
its Yongbyon nuclear plant.

Hopes that such a deal would be sealed at the previous round in December
faded after North Korea focused on its objections to a US financial
crackdown.

David Albright, a Washington-based nuclear expert who visited Pyongyang
last week, told Reuters that chief North Korean negotiator Kim Kye-gwan
was "optimistic" a deal, including a freeze on plutonium production at
Yongbyon, was within reach this time.

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