China's chief nuclear negotiator wrapped up a five-day visit to North Korea on Friday, state media announced - a mission reportedly focused on bringing Pyongyang back to disarmament talks.
China's chief nuclear negotiator wrapped up a five-day visit to North Korea on Friday, state media announced - a mission reportedly focused on bringing Pyongyang back to disarmament talks.

Vice Foreign Minister Wu Dawei, who had arrived in the North Korean capital Monday, left Friday after a series of meetings with top officials, China's Xinhua news agency and the North's Korean Central News Agency reported.

Wu met with his North Korean counterpart Kim Kye Gwan as well as Foreign Minister Pak Ui Chun on the "regional situation," the agencies reported.

China has hosted the six-party negotiations aimed at ending Pyongyang's nuclear drive since they began in 2003. South Korea, the U.S., Russia and Japan are also involved in the talks.

North Korea quit the forum in protest at the U.N. Security Council's condemnation of its rocket launch in April. Its second nuclear test in May sparked tougher enforcement of U.N. sanctions.

In signs of a possible easing of tensions, former U.S. President Bill Clinton went to Pyongyang this month to meet leader Kim Jong Il, winning a pardon for two jailed U.S. journalists.

North Korean diplomats met this week with New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, a veteran of talks with Pyongyang in the 1990s, who said they indicated they wanted a "new dialogue" with Washington on the nuclear issue.

Pyongyang is seeking direct talks with the U.S. Washington says this is possible, but only alongside the six-party negotiations.

The North sent a high-level delegation to South Korea for the funeral of former president Kim Dae-jung and said it would lift tough restrictions on border crossings, in further indications of a thaw in icy ties with Seoul.