As the ongoing six-party talks on the Korean Peninsula nuclear
issue entered its fifth day in Beijing Saturday, parties concerned
continued to hold bilateral meetings in an attempt to finalize a
common document proposed by China.?
US chief negotiator to the talks Christopher Hill Saturday
morning said that he didn't want to speculate what the involved
parties were going to do in the afternoon.
"The six parties are currently in the process of evaluating
where we are as right," Hill told reporters before he left the
hotel for the fifth-day negotiations, possibly the last day of the
current round of the six-party talks.
He said the new draft common document proposed by China was "a
good package" without making any elaboration.
He said he would further consult with Washington on telephone in
the morning.
However, Japanese delegation head Kenichiro Sasae told reporters
on Saturday morning that not every party involved was satisfied
with the new draft, including Japan itself.
According to a report by Russian Itartass on Saturday, North
Korea was sort of dissatisfied with the new draft, because it
"actually repeats the US standpoint, which North Korea can never
accept."
Bilateral meetings were held respectively on Saturday morning
between China and the United States, the United States and Japan,
and South Korea and the United States, according to the press
center of the Chinese delegation.
By press time, the China-Japan consultation is still going on,
and a head-of-delegation session is going to be held on Saturday
afternoon, according to the press center.
As the host nation, China tabled a new common document draft on
Friday afternoon and asked other parties to respond before Saturday
afternoon.
The draft common document submitted by China included North
Korea's right to civilian nuclear programs and a light-water
reactor, chief Russian negotiator Alexander Alexeyev said on
Friday.
(Xinhua News Agency September 17, 2005)