N.Korea tells Carter wants to resume nuclear talks

SEOUL, (Reuters) – North Korea’s number two leader  has told former U.S. President Jimmy Carter that the reclusive  state is committed to denuclearising the peninsula and resuming  six-way talks, the North’s state news agency said last night.

Carter left the North this morning, KCNA said. The  Carter Center in a statement from the former president said  that he was leaving Pyongyang with an American who had been  convicted of illegally entering the country.

“Kim Yong Nam expressed the will of the DPRK government for  the denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula and the resumption  of the six-party talks,” KCNA said, referring to the meeting of  the North’s number two with Carter.

Carter’s visit took place amid heightened tensions on the  peninsula after the torpedoing in March of a South Korean  warship, which Seoul blames on the North and which prompted  Washington to announce expanded sanctions against Pyongyang.

Shortly after Carter arrived in Pyongyang, the North’s  reclusive leader, Kim Jong-il, left for ally China on a  surprise trip that analysts believe may be to line up Beijing  behind his dynastic succession plans.

Carter was leaving Pyongyang with Aijalon Mahli Gomes, who  was arrested in January and sentenced to eight years of hard  labour. KCNA said last month that he had tried to commit  suicide.