EARLY EDITION 18:00  U.S. chief nuclear envoy says N. Korea needs to be serious...

EARLY EDITION 18:00 U.S. chief nuclear envoy says N. Korea needs to be serious...

Early Edition 18:00 On our newscast tonight. Washington′s top nuclear envoy visits Seoul and repeats that Pyongyang must display sincerity towards denuclearization before any talks can begin. A special police division dedicated to sex-crime investigations will be set up in Korea next year. It′s in response to a number of respected, high-profile men being accused of sex abuse offenses. The maiden launch of NASA′s Orion deep-space capsule is foiled by wind gusts and sticky fuel valves. Officials will make another attempt on Friday. These and more up next on Early Edition at Six. Title: U.S. chief nuclear envoy says N. Korea needs to be serious about denuclearization for talks to restart Washington′s top nuclear envoy Sung Kim is in Seoul for talks with his South Korean counterpart Hwang Joon-kook. Much of the talk is focused on North Korea and its nuclear program. Our Lee Ji-yoon has more on what Kim said about the long-stalled six-party nuclear talks. Washington is NOT lowering the bar for restarting nuclear talks. U.S. Special Representative for North Korea Policy Sung Kim says the fate of the stalled six-party talks depends on Pyongyang. "It will be a mistake for us to rush back to negotiations unless we can have some confidence that the North Koreans are ready to work with us in a sincere and serious manner toward a complete and verifiable denuclearization." The former U.S. ambassador to South Korea met with his South Korean counterpart Hwang Joon-kook on Friday in Seoul. There, Kim said, the U.S. wants to resume negotiations, and that its diplomatic doors are open to North Korea, but that the North has refused to walk through them. The meeting between the nuclear envoys from Seoul and Washington follows a visit by North Korean special envoy Choe Ryong-hae to Russia last month. There, Choe reportedly said Pyongyang was ready to resume the talks on its nuclear program,... without preconditions. Next week, Kim will travel to Japan and China, both participants of the six-party talks,.. to discuss the North Korean issue once again. Lee Ji-yoon, Arirang News. Title: South Korea′s torpedoed Cheonan warship moved to educational facility And not only nuclear... but also military threats from North Korea are still very present on the Korean peninsula. The latest example is the sinking of the South Korean warship Cheonan by Pyongyang in 2010. Next March will mark the fifth anniversary... and Cheonan has are now being used for educational purposes. Choi You-sun reports. Inside a park at the South Korean Navy′s Second Fleet headquarters south of Seoul now stands what remains of the Cheonan warship, which was torpedoed by North Korea nearly five years ago. A six-million-dollar project has placed the 1-thousand-200-ton vessel here from a nearby dock to show the very appearance of the Cheonan, cut into two pieces after the attack on March 26th 2010, which claimed the lives of 46 South Korean sailors. Visitors can get