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Six-Party joint document could arrive today
By Qin Jize (China Daily)
Updated: 2005-08-01 05:26

The Six-Party Talks entered their sixth day yesterday as negotiators tried to thrash out the text of a joint document.

US chief negotiator Christopher Hill talks to reporters as he gets to his car on July 31, 2005. [newsphoto]
Chief delegates from Beijing, Pyongyang, Washington, Seoul, Moscow and Tokyo left it to their deputies to continue discussions over the drafting of a joint document yesterday afternoon following working level consultations in the morning.

The Republic Of Korea (ROK)'s chief delegate, Song Min-soon, said all parties had come to the consensus that a strong framework should be set up with the aim of denuclearizing the Korean Peninsula.

He told a press conference that the nations have not yet discussed the exact wording of a final text, but during yesterday's five-hour session heard opinions on China's proposals for a joint document.

Song said he did not know when talks would end, adding that all participating parties would reach an agreement that represented the core aim of the talks.

He said the joint document would consult a 1992 inter-Korean pledge to make the peninsula nuclear-free, according to Xinhua.

Under the 1992 denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula, the ROK and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) pledged not to test, produce, store, deploy or use nuclear weapons.
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