BONN, May 21 (AFP) - Senior G8 representatives started their second meeting in a week here Friday in a bid to agree upon a UN Security Council draft resolution aimed at resolving the conflict in Yugoslavia. German representative Gunter Pleuger said before the political directors from the Group of Seven leading industrial countries and Russia went into talks that they aimed to hammer out the last details of a seven-page draft resolution that was mapped out at Wednesday's talks. He said the goal was to build a consensus of the G8 -- Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia and the United States -- so that Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic could no longer tell the Serbian people that Moscow was behind them. In reaction to Thursday's comments by Italian Premier Massimo D'Alema that NATO's bombing of Yugoslavia should cease once the draft resolution was agreed upon, Pleuger said any ceasefire should "build peace, not give Milosevic more opportunity to kill and drive people out." Pleuger added that Belgrade would have to be involved in discussions on implementing the ceasefire and said that either Finnish President Marrti Ahtisaari, US Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott or Russian Balkans envoy Viktor Chernomyrdin could be sent to talk to the Serbs. He added: "If a UN resolution is passed and Yugoslavia still resists, then we have a situation like Iraq, which we want to avoid, so Belgrade must be consulted."  