DPRK-Japan talks conclude in Beijing without major progress (Xinhua) Updated: 2006-02-08 10:17
The bilateral governmental talks between the Democratic People's Republic of
Korea (DPRK) and Japan concluded in Beijing Wednesday without any major progress
achieved.
The talks, started on February 4, is in a three-track format covering such
topics as the abduction issue, normalization of diplomatic ties, and security
issue. Diplomats from both countries formed three groups carrying out
discussions of these topics respectively.
Vice Director of the DPRK Foreign Ministry's Asian Affairs Department Kim
Chol Ho and Deputy Chief of the Japanese Foreign Ministry's Asian and Oceanian
Affairs Bureau Kunio Umeda met on Sunday to air their views and stances on the
abduction issue. Both agreed to continue the talks on the issue despite great
differences between the two sides.
Koichi Haraguchi, Japanese ambassador in charge of the Japan-DPRK
normalization talks and his DPRK counterpart Song Il Ho talked about the
normalization of diplomatic ties on Monday, but no full consensus was achieved.
Tadamichi Yamamoto, Japanese ambassador in charge of the Korean Peninsula
nuclear issue, and Jong Thae Yang, deputy chief of the DPRK Foreign Ministry's
U.S. affairs department held talks mainly covering the nuclear and missile issue
on Tuesday morning.
Then Kim Chol Ho and Kunio Umeda picked up the abduction issue again on
Tuesday afternoon and still made no major progress.
This new round of inter-governmental talks is held after an interval of more
than three years. The previous round was held in Malaysia in 2002.
Previously, the two countries held a meeting in Beijing on December 24 and
December 25 last year, during which they agreed to set up three working groups
on history, security guarantee and abduction issues.
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