| Home
North Korea committed to denuclearisation, Kim tells China
Kazakhstan News.Net Tuesday 9th February, 2010 (IANS)
North Korean leader Kim Jong Il has told visiting Chinese officials that his country remains committed to denuclearisation through six-nation talks.
'The sincerity of relevant parties to resume the six-party talks is very important,' the official Xinhua news agency reported Tuesday quoting Kim as telling Wang Jiarui, the head of the Chinese Communist Party's international department.
Kim said in Pyongyang that North Korea was 'willing to make efforts with China to further strengthen the communication and coordination' over the six-party negotiations on ending Pyongyang's nuclear weapons programme.
An envoy of UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon arrived Tuesday in Pyongyang and became the first high-ranking UN official to visit the communist country since 2004.
During his own visit, Wang gave Kim a letter from Chinese President Hu Jintao, saying that China wanted the two nations to 'make joint efforts... to maintain peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula,' the agency said.
Hu invited Kim to visit China, but the agency did not say if Kim accepted the invitation.
Pyongyang walked out of the six-way talks involving South Korea, North Korea, Russia, the US, China and Japan in April, insisting that UN sanctions be lifted as a condition to returning to the negotiating table.
Lynn Pascoe, undersecretary general for political affairs at the UN, is to also discuss the resumption of denuclearisation talks when he meets with North Korean officials.
The priority of the American's mission, however, is to improve cooperation between North Korea and the world organization, Pascoe was quoted as saying.
Pascoe's delegation is to be in North Korea for four days. Email this story to a friend
Have your say on this story
|
 |
 |
- Meet Asia's biggest loser - David Gurnani
David Gurnani, an Indonesian man, has won weight-loss reality show The Biggest Loser Asia (TBLA), organised in Malaysia. [read story]
- PCB's decision shocks Pakistan's new coach Waqar
Pakistan's new coach Waqar Younis was Wednesday shocked over the cricket board's decision to ban and fine several leading national players. [read story]
- Indonesian President admits Bali bomber killed in Jakarta raid
Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has confirmed that Jemaah Islamiah leader Dulmatin, the key accused in 2002 Bali bombings, has been killed in a raid in Jakarta. [read story]
- Tainted godman's Malaysian centre will not shut down
A centre run by followers of Swami Paramhamsa Nithyananda, allegedly involved in a sex scandal in southern India, will not close down and will continue to promote his teachings, a Hindu leader said. [read story]
- Myanmar election law bars Aung San Suu Kyi from polls
Myanmar's new election laws have barred opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi and more than 2,000 other political prisoners from contesting polls planned this year, state media reports said Wednesday. [read story]
|
|
 |
 |
|
|