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    Kim Jong-il assures Hu on talks

    BACK TO THE TABLE: The North Korean leader told the Chinese president that his country would resume talks on ending the North's nuclear weapons program

    AP , BEIJING
    Sunday, Oct 30, 2005, Page 4

    North Korean leader Kim Jong-il, right, walks beside Chinese President Hu Jintao upon Hu's arrival at the Pyongyang airport in North Korea on Friday.
    PHOTO: EPA
    North Korean leader Kim Jong-il praised China's efforts to ensure peace on the Korean Peninsula after he promised the Chinese president that Pyongyang will take part in the next round of nuclear talks scheduled for next month, news reports said yesterday.

    Kim the remarks on Friday at a banquet for President Hu Jintao (­JÀAÀÜ), who was visiting Pyongyang to lobby for progress in Chinese-organized six-nation talks on demands that the North give up its nuclear ambitions.

    At a banquet on Friday evening, Kim said Hu's government was "making serious efforts to ensure peace and stability on the neighboring Korean Peninsula. We highly appreciate this," the North's official Korean Central News Agency reported.

    China under pressure from the US and other governments to use its leverage as North Korea's main aid donor to push Pyongyang for concessions in the talks. The negotiations also include South Korea, Japan and Russia.

    Kim's comment on Friday was the highest-level commitment yet by the Stalinist dictatorship to push ahead with talks aimed at stripping North Korea of its nuclear programs.

    "The North Korean side will participate as scheduled in the fifth round of six-nation talks," Chinese state TV quoted him as saying. "North Korea is committed to the denuclearization of the peninsula."

    Kim Hu that the North was committed to a nuclear-free Korean Peninsula, according to Chinese media.

    Despite polite tone, China's status as the isolated North's last major ally and aid donor gives Hu's plea special weight.

    Hu the first Chinese leader to visit North Korea since 2001.

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