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Six-Party Talks to Continue on Tuesday with No Agenda Fixed

A deputy chief negotiators' session for the ongoing six-party talks on the Korean Peninsula nuclear issue concluded on Monday evening, and the talks will continue Tuesday, according to the press center with the Chinese delegation.
  
The working-level meeting began at 3:19 on Monday afternoon and lasted approximately three hours and a half, the press center said, adding that the agenda for Tuesday's talks is yet to be set.
  
The six-party talks inched into the seventh day, and the process of consultations on the draft of a common document was "rather well" though there was "difference on language," US delegation head Christopher Hill said earlier Monday.
  
Chief negotiators from the six nations had frequent shuttle contacts for in-depth discussions on the wording of the draft on Monday morning, according to the Chinese delegation.
  
The Russian delegation on Monday denied major differences in the ongoing negotiation and said the talks did not reach an impasse.
  
"There were no major differences, nor did the talks come to a standstill," said V. Yermolov, deputy head of the Russian delegation.
  
However, according to Hill, also US assistant secretary of state, it was still a "tough task" for all the parties to reach a consensus, and a lot of patience was needed.

(Xinhua News Agency August 1, 2005)

Deputy Heads' Meeting Concludes
No Major Differences in Six-Party Talks
Six Parties to Continue Discussing Draft Common Document
Six Parties Work on Draft Joint Document
Negotiators Strive for Joint Document
Six Parties Continue Work on Drafting of Joint Document
Six-party Talks Enter New Stage
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