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US, South Korean envoys discuss 'next steps' on North Korea
Posted: 30 December 2011 0727 hrs

  US special representative on North Korea policy Glyn Davies (R) and South Korea's nuclear envoy Lim Sung-Nam (L) in Seoul. (AFP Photo/File/Jung Yeon-Je)
 
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WASHINGTON: Top US and South Korean diplomats discussed the "next steps" to take on the Korean peninsula following the death of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il, the US State Department said on Thursday.

South Korea's top nuclear envoy Lim Sung-Nam held "constructive, substantive" talks in Washington on Wednesday with Glyn Davies, the US special representative for North Korea policy, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said.

"They discussed a wide variety of issues, including next steps in the Korean Peninsula," she told reporters without elaborating.

The talks reflected "the close cooperation between our two countries and the personal bond that they are beginning to form," she added.

South Korean foreign ministry spokesman Cho Byung-Jae said on Tuesday the pair would discuss "the current state of the Korean Peninsula after Kim Jong-Il's death and discuss coordination to make progress on the North's nuclear issue."

Lim met with China's chief nuclear envoy Wu Dawei in Beijing last week for talks about how to respond to the sudden demise of North Korea's long-time ruler on December 17.

The six-party talks on the North's nuclear weapons programme - chaired by China and involving the two Koreas, the United States, Japan and Russia - have been at a standstill since the last round in December 2008.

Pyongyang stormed out in April 2009 in protest against what it described as US hostility, and staged its second nuclear test about a month later.

The North and China have expressed a wish to return to the forum without preconditions. But Washington and Seoul have insisted the North should show sincerity in denuclearisation and ease tensions with the South.

Negotiations to resume the talks had appeared to be making progress before Kim's death, with reports Pyongyang would bow to a key US demand that it suspend its uranium enrichment programme in return for food aid from the United States.

Nuland confirmed that Robert King, the special US envoy for human rights who travelled earlier this year to North Korea to explore possibilities for food assistance, attended the meeting with Lim and Davies.

"We are continuing to talk about the humanitarian situation in the DPRK," she said, referring to the North.

- AFP/de

 



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