The French president’s special envoy on North Korea held talks yesterday with the country’s foreign minister during a visit to Pyongyang to explore the possibility of establishing diplomatic ties with the communist regime.
North Korean Foreign Minister Pak Ui-chun greeted French envoy Jack Lang and his delegation with handshakes before they sat down for talks, footage aired by TV broadcaster APTN showed in Pyongyang.
Lang, a former culture minister appointed by French President Nicolas Sarkozy as his special envoy to North Korea, called Pak’s welcome a “magnificent moment,” APTN reported.
“Both sides exchanged views on the issue of the bilateral relations and a series of matters of mutual concern,” North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency later said in a brief dispatch without elaborating.
Lang has said his mission during the five-day visit that began on Monday is to explore the possibility of diplomatic ties between France and North Korea. France is one of only two European nations that does not have formal ties with North Korea.
Lang said earlier that he would also seek to discuss North Korea’s nuclear program.
North Korea has been locked in a standoff with the international community over its atomic ambitions. Earlier this year, the country earned widespread censure for launching a long-range rocket, conducting an underground nuclear test and test-firing a series of missiles.
The regime walked away from six-nation disarmament talks in response to the criticism and the toughened sanctions meted out by the UN Security Council as punishment for the defiance.
In recent months, however, North Korea has reached out to Washington, requesting one-on-one talks with the wartime foe. The two countries, which fought on opposite sides of the 1950 to 1953 Korean War, do not have diplomatic relations.
The US has said it would hold talks — but only if they lead to the resumption of the six-party disarmament negotiations.
In Washington, two US officials said the administration of US President Barack Obama had decided to take up North Korea’s offer and send Obama’s special envoy on North Korea, Stephen Bosworth, to Pyongyang for direct talks.
The officials discussed the matter late on Monday in Washington on condition of anonymity because the decision has not been publicly announced.
The administration hopes Bosworth’s meeting would be a step toward persuading the North Koreans to return to nuclear disarmament negotiations with the US, Russia, China, Japan and South Korea, they said.
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