N Korea hints at 'specific' talks

**North Korea has again insisted it would not return to six-party talks aimed at dismantling its nuclear weapons programmes.**But it has hinted it was still open to some form of dialogue.

“There is a specific and reserved form of dialogue that can address the current situation,” state media quoted a foreign ministry statement.

The note follows an exchange of insults between the North and the US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton last week.

The ministry statement quoted by North Korean media did not elaborate on what form any new dialogue could take.

Some analysts saw the statement as a sign that after a series of provocations to the international community, North Korea may now be ready to find a way to ease tension.

But it was clear that the North believes that past patterns of persuasion or pressure for Pyongyang to rejoin talks with China, Russia, South Korea, Japan and the United States were over.

“Any attempt to side with those who claim the resumption of the six-party talks without grasping the essence of the matter will not help ease tension,” the foreign ministry spokesman said in the statement.

Six or two

North Korea’s UN envoy, Sin Son-ho, had said on Friday that Pyongyang was not opposed to negotiations with the US, but that it would not return to the six-party format.

In the past, the North has demanded talks only with the US, something Washington has previously been loath to do.

North Korea’s main Rodong Sinmun newspaper also said Sunday that the country’s envoy told an Asian security conference in Thailand last week that the nuclear standoff was a matter only between Pyongyang and Washington.

The US says it is willing to hold direct talks with the North within the six-nation process if it returns to the negotiating table and takes irreversible steps for denuclearisation.

On Sunday, Mrs Clinton said on NBC television that the six-party talk framework was “the appropriate way to engage with North Korea.”

The North quit the multilateral disarmament talks after the UN Security Council imposed tough sanctions after the North launched nuclear and missile tests.

These include an expanded arms embargo and beefed up inspections of air, sea and land shipments going to and from North Korea.

Speaking at an Asian regional forum in Thailand last week Mrs Clinton said North Korea had no friends to protect it from international efforts to end its nuclear programme.

Separately, a spokesman in Pyongyang described Mrs Clinton as a “funny lady” - responding to her comments that North Korea’s behaviour was that of an unruly child.

“Her words suggest that she is by no means intelligent,” the spokesman said, quoted by state news agency KCNA.

“Sometimes she looks like a primary schoolgirl and sometimes a pensioner going shopping. Anyone making misstatements has to pay for them.”