China to send talks envoy to North Korea   (Reuters)  Updated: 2006-07-06 18:36  
China's top negotiator on the North Korean nuclear crisis will accompany Vice 
Premier Hui Liangyu on a visit to Pyongyang next week, a Chinese Foreign 
Ministry offical said on Thursday. 
 A day after North Korea test-fired missiles, which triggered a flurry of 
diplomatic initiatives, China said Vice Foreign Minister Wu Dawei would be part 
of the delegation to Pyongyang. 
 Wu, who headed negotiations for Beijing at the last round of talks between 
the Koreas, the United States, Japan, China and Russia, would also hold talks 
with visiting US envoy Christopher Hill, who was due in Beijing on Friday. 
 "North Korea's firing of missiles has no relationship with China," 
spokeswoman Jiang Yu told reporters. "We hope to ease diplomatic tensions 
through diplomatic efforts and resolve problems through dialogue and 
consultation." 
 The meetings come as China grapples with pressure from Washington over North 
Korea's test-firing of several missiles, including a long-range missile. 
 Hui is due to head to North Korea on July 10 to mark the 45th anniversary of 
a Sino-North Korean friendship treaty. The trip will go ahead despite North 
Korea's missile tests on Wednesday. 
 But Jiang gave no sign that China was retreating from its position that 
negotiation can defuse conflicts between Pyongyang and the West through the 
so-called six-party talks. 
 Those talks have stalled since November, as North Korea resists US's 
financial restrictions against its alleged currency counterfeiting and other 
illicit activities. 
 "It's precisely at this time of difficulty that we hope all sides will adopt 
a pragmatic and flexible attitude to appropriately resolve their mutual problems 
and concerns, and create conditions for reviving the six-party talks," Jiang 
said.  
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