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North Korea Celebrates Kim Birthday, While Neighbors Try to Restart
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Nuclear Diplomacy
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=BA6F8D:2AB91D3

Pyongyang last week declared it would suspend participation in
six-nation nuclear talks





Flower show marking Kim Jong Il's birthday attracts visitors in
PyongyangAs North Korea celebrated Kim Jong Il's birthday, South Korea
and its neighbors continued diplomacy to restart multi-lateral nuclear
talks that Pyongyang has abandoned.

It was a day of singing and pageantry in Pyongyang, as North Korea
officially celebrated the 63rd birthday of leader Kim Jong Il.

Along with the bursting of fireworks, a North Korean official can be
heard shouting on state television "Fire for fire - nuclear weapons
for nuclear weapons."

The words were another very public reference to North Korea's
possession of nuclear weapons, which it again officially declared to
the world last week.

While Pyongyang celebrated one of its biggest holidays, other
countries continued diplomatic efforts to restart talks aimed at
ending North Korea's nuclear programs. The North last week declared it
would suspend participation in the six-nation talks.

South Korean President Roh Moo-Hyun convened a meeting of security
officials to discuss North Korea. His government will send Deputy
Foreign Minister Song Min-Soon to Beijing on Thursday to discuss the
issue with Chinese officials.

International security Professor Kim Jae-chun at Sogang University
says the timing is right for South Korea and China to play "the China
card."

Professor Kim says China is the only country with real leverage over
North Korea, but so far Washington and Seoul have not pushed hard
enough for China to use it.

China is North Korea's oldest ally and provides a large portion of its
impoverished neighbor's food and energy supplies.

South Korean Foreign Minister Ban Ki-Moon, who just returned from
Washington, says he also will speak by telephone with his counterpart
in Beijing.

South Korea says it will not begin any major new economic initiatives
with North Korea until nuclear talks resume. South Korean officials
say they will continue to provide rice and fertilizer to the North for
humanitarian reasons.

Japan, China, South Korea, Russia and the United States want North
Korea to live up to its past agreements to be nuclear free. There are
concerns that a nuclear-armed North could present a security threat in
northern Asia and that Pyongyang could sell the weapons to other
nations or terrorist groups.

In Tokyo, outgoing US Ambassador Howard Baker told reporters Pyongyang
could still return to the talks.

"I was surprised and disappointed that the North Koreans withdrew, but
I was intrigued with the wording of their statement, which said 'for
the time being' in effect, which gives me some hope that they might
return," he said.

Japan, South Korea, the United States, China, and Russia have held
three unsuccessful rounds of talks with North Korea in efforts to
persuade it to end its nuclear programs.