ID :
197848
Thu, 07/28/2011 - 12:04
Auther :

S. Korea urges N. Korea to show sincerity in talks with U.S.

(ATTN: ADDS South Korean deputy chief nuclear envoy heading to New York in paras 6-7)
SEOUL, July 28 (Yonhap) -- North Korea needs to show its sincerity in giving up its nuclear weapons programs in a rare meeting with the United States this week, South Korea's foreign ministry said Thursday, amid cautious hopes for the resumption of the stalled six-party talks on the North's nuclear drive.
North Korea's First Vice Foreign Minister Kim Kye-gwan and Stephen Bosworth, Washington's top envoy on the North, were scheduled to hold bilateral talks in New York on Thursday (local time). A second day of meetings is likely to be held on Friday.
The New York meeting, the first of its kind in almost three years, comes a week after the nuclear envoys of South Korea and North Korea met on the sidelines of an Asian security conference in Bali and agreed to make joint efforts to swiftly resume the six-party talks.
"We hope to verify North Korea's sincerity on denuclearization throughout the (North Korea-U.S.) talks," Foreign Ministry spokesman Cho Byung-jae told reporters.
"Also, we expect such talks to offer a useful opportunity to check to what extent North Korea is prepared to move toward denuclearization."
South Korea sent its deputy chief nuclear negotiator to New York to coordinate issues with the U.S. side ahead of the Kim-Bosworth meeting, a diplomatic source in Seoul said.
Cho Hyun-dong, director-general of the ministry's North Korean Nuclear Affairs Bureau, left for New York earlier in the day, the source said on the condition of anonymity.
The Bali meeting between Wi Sung-lac of South Korea and his newly appointed North Korean counterpart, Ri Yong-ho, provided a ray of hope for the future of the deadlocked six-party talks that also involve the U.S., China, Japan and Russia.
Efforts to reopen the six-party talks, dormant since December 2008, have been complicated by the North's deadly military attacks on the South last year and its self-confessed uranium enrichment program.
Arriving in New York Tuesday, North Korean diplomat Kim said he was upbeat about the Pyongyang-Washington ties and the future of the six-party nuclear negotiations.
U.S. officials, however, remained cautious.
"This will be an exploratory meeting to determine if North Korea is prepared to fulfill its commitments under the 2005 joint statement of the six-party talks," U.S. State Department spokesman Mark Toner told reporters in Washington a day ahead of the New York meeting.
The six-party talks produced some agreements in 2005 and 2007, but few follow-up actions have been taken. Despite the deals, North Korea conducted two nuclear tests in 2006 and 2009.

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