Committed to PEOPLE'S RIGHT TO KNOW
Vol. 5 Num 979 Fri. March 02, 2007  
   
Front Page


N Korea pledges to give up nukes in talks
Seoul, Pyongyang at odds over aid push


North Korea's No. 2 leader pledged his country's commitment yesterday to giving up its nuclear programme during a meeting with a visiting high-level South Korean delegation.

"The denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula is the dying wish" of the country's late founding president Kim Il Sung, said Kim Yong Nam. The North "will make efforts to realize it," he said.

At the meeting, South Korean Unification Minister Lee Jae-joung pressed the North to implement a Feb. 13 pledge to take initial steps to disarm.

"It is important to make efforts to ensure that South and North Korea cooperate and six countries each assume their responsibilities," Lee said in reference to the accord reached last month in Beijing between North Korea and five other countries.

This week's Cabinet-level talks between the North and South the highest-level regular contact between the Koreas are the first in seven months. The talks resumed after North Korea's pledge to shut down its main nuclear reactor within 60 days in exchange for aid.

Earlier Thursday, North Korean negotiators appealed for aid from the South, but Seoul appeared resistant to promising any major assistance until Pyongyang keeps its pledge to start dismantling its nuclear programme.

Meanwhile, North Korea appealed at high-level talks yesterday for aid from South Korea, which appeared resistant to promising major assistance until Pyongyang keeps its pledge to start dismantling its nuclear weapons programme.

"The North side has brought up the issue of humanitarian aid," a South Korean official told reporters in Pyongyang, where talks between the two Koreas stretched into a third day.

But the official, indicating the South's reluctance to provide the North most badly needed supplies, said that a draft agreement between the two sides "does not specifically mention rice and fertiliser aid."

South Korea regularly sent aid to the impoverished North until last July, when Pyongyang test-fired a series of missiles, prompting a halt in shipments. Relations between the two countries further soured after the North's nuclear test in October.

This week's Cabinet-level talks are the first in seven months. They came after North Korea's Feb. 13 pledge to shut down its main nuclear reactor within 60 days in exchange for aid.

South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun said Thursday that the nuclear deal "should be successfully implemented so that a peace regime can be firmly established on the Korean peninsula."

The Feb. 13 deal calls for a separate forum on discussing a peace agreement to replace the cease-fire that has held the Korean War at a standstill since 1953. Roh's comments came during a speech for the national holiday marking a March 1, 1919, uprising during Japan's 1910-45 colonial rule of the peninsula.

Countries involved in the nuclear talks the Koreas, China, Japan, Russia and the US have begun preparations to implement the disarmament pact.

State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said in Washington that US and North Korean officials will meet in New York next Monday and Tuesday to discuss normalising relations, one of the steps to be taken under the nuclear deal.

South Korean Foreign Minister Song Min-soon left for Washington Thursday for talks with his counterpart, Condoleezza Rice, on the North Korea nuclear issue, and he also will travel to Moscow.

Seoul wants North Korea to make a firmer commitment to the international nuclear accord during this week's meetings. But the North has shunned discussing the nuclear issue with the South, as it has in the past, saying the matter is only between Pyongyang and Washington.

The North focused instead on inter-Korean issues, proposing the resumption of a range of contacts with the South to move forward on reconciliation, delegation spokesman Lee Kwan-se told South Korean pool reporters Wednesday.

In exchange, the North is expected to agree to a South Korean proposal that they resume reunions of families separated since the 1950-53 Korean War.

After Wednesday's meetings, South Korea's chief delegate, Unification Minister Lee Jae-joung, said the negotiations were "very difficult."

Lee, however, sounded hopeful that some agreements can be reached when the talks end Friday, according to pool reports.

The South Korean delegation was to meet North Korea's No. 2 leader, Kim Yong Nam, later Thursday.

The two Koreas remain technically at war since the Korean War ended in a cease-fire, not a peace treaty. But the two sides have made historic strides toward reconciliation after their leaders met for the first time in 2000, and this week's talks are the 20th such Cabinet-level meeting since then.