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ASEAN Urges Restart of Six-Party Talks on North
Korea
KUALA LUMPUR, July 25, 2006 (AFP) - Southeast
Asian states on Tuesday issued a statement urging six countries
involved in negotiations on North Korea's nuclear ambitions to
return to talks and resolve the issue peacefully. The Association of
Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) said North and South Korea, the
United States, China, Japan and Russia should meet on the sidelines
of the region's top security forum being held here Friday. "We call
on all parties concerned to resume the six-party talks and take
advantage of their presence at the 13th ARF (ASEAN Regional Forum)
to fully utilize this opportunity for dialogue as a means to move
forward in achieving a peaceful resolution of the issue," the
statement said. "We emphasize that the denuclearization of the
Korean Peninsula is essential in maintaining peace and stability in
the Asia Pacific region," said the statement issued by the group's
foreign ministers after annual talks. South Korea's Foreign Minister
Ban Ki-Moon told reporters earlier Tuesday that efforts were under
way to hold talks between the foreign ministers of the six nations.
North Korea has boycotted the three-year-old nuclear disarmament
talks since November in protest at US financial sanctions. Tensions
rose after Pyongyang's July 5 test-firing of seven ballistic
missiles in defiance of international appeals. UN condemnation and
sanctions followed. North Korean Foreign Minister Paek Nam-Sun is
due to arrive in the Malaysian capital on Thursday, along with US
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who was branded an "imbecile"
by Pyongyang on Monday. dk/sls/sst |