North Korea
told Cambodia Saturday it was ready to rejoin six-party denuclearisation talks,
Phnom Penh said, without outlining any conditions to a potential return to the
negotiating table.
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| Cambodian
Prime Minister Hun Sen (R) talks to North Korea's Foreign Minister Pak Ui-Chun (L) during a meeting in Phnom Penh. |
North
Korean Foreign Minister Pak Ui-Chun met with his Cambodian counterpart in Phnom
Penh and "clearly stated that the Democratic People's Republic of Korea is
ready to participate in the six-party talks", Cambodian foreign ministry
spokesman Koy Kuong told reporters.
"Cambodia
welcomes the positive step," he said, adding that Pak "did not talk
about conditions during the meeting".
Tensions
are high on the Korean peninsula after the North's failed rocket launch in
April, seen by the United States and its allies as an attempted ballistic
missile test.
Six-party
talks involving the two Koreas, China, the US, Russia and Japan have been
stalled since December 2008.
The North
has repeatedly expressed a willingness to return to the forum on its nuclear
disarmament but without prior conditions.
Washington
and South Korea say before a resumption of discussions, the North must first
show it is serious about the process, notably by shutting down a uranium
enrichment programme which could be reconfigured to make bombs.
The North
has been developing nuclear weapons for decades.
The United
States reached a deal on February 29 this year to offer North Korea badly
needed food aid in return for a freeze on nuclear and missile tests, but it
rescinded the plan after the rocket launch.
Under a
September 2005 deal reached during six-nation negotiations, Pyongyang agreed to
dismantle its nuclear programmes in return for economic and diplomatic benefits
and security guarantees. The North has staged two nuclear tests, in 2006 and
2009.
The meeting
between the Cambodian and North Korean foreign ministers, whose countries have
close ties, came after an Asian security gathering in Phnom Penh during which
North Korea said it needs atomic weaponry to deter a US nuclear threat.
It also
vowed never to give up its right to launch rockets as part of what it called a
peaceful space programme.

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