Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu
Jianchao on Friday called for dialogue and contacts to
peacefully resolve the issue of the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea's (DPRK) resumption of its nuclear
program.
China hoped the concerned parties
would comply with their duties under the 1994 Agreed
Framework reached in Geneva between the United States and
the DPRK in a bid to maintain the peace and stability of the
Korean Peninsula.
The spokesman made
the remarks when asked to comment on DPRK's Thursday
announcement that it would resume the operation and
construction of its nuclear facilities to generate
electricity in response to the US decision to suspend
supplies of heavy oil to the DPRK.
"We have noticed relevant
reports," Liu said, stressing that China's stance on
the DPRK nuclear issue was "consistent".
China had always favored
denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula, and has been
dedicated to peace and stability on peninsula and upheld
that the issue should be resolved through dialogue, he
added.
On Thursday, a DPRK Foreign
Ministry spokesman said the DPRK would immediately resume
the operation and construction of its nuclear facilities to
generate electricity, adding that "whether the DPRK
refreezes its nuclear facilities or not hinges upon the
United States".
On November 14,
the United States made a decision to suspend supplies of
heavy oil to the DPRK, claiming that the DPRK had been
developing a secret nuclear program in violation of the 1994
Agreed Framework.