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Home News Asia

US Man in N Korean Prison Hopes He’s Released Soon

Eric Talmadge by Eric Talmadge
July 5, 2013
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US Man in N Korean Prison Hopes He’s Released Soon

A North Korean prison policewoman stands guard behind fences at a jail on the banks of Yalu River near the Chongsong county of North Korea

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TOKYO — An American imprisoned in North Korea has told a pro-Pyongyang media outlet that he wants the United States to “try harder” to help him gain amnesty from a sentence of 15 years of hard labor for alleged crimes against the government.

In what appears to be his first media interview since his November arrest, Kenneth Bae told the Tokyo-based Choson Sinbo in a story published Wednesday that he had hoped to be out by Thursday. That’s not only Independence Day but his father’s 70th birthday. He said he still hopes the US government will help him get released quickly.

He was sent in May to what the North calls a “special prison,” and Pyongyang’s decision to allow the interview may have been an attempt to show that he is not being treated harshly. But an analyst said Pyongyang is also trying to use Bae as a bargaining chip to start bilateral talks with the United States.

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Bae, 44, of Lynnwood, Washington, was arrested in the northeastern North Korean region of Rason and was interviewed last week at a North Korean prison where he is serving out his sentence. An American of Korean descent, Bae entered the special economic zone as a tour operator but was convicted in late April of plotting to commit “hostile acts” against the North Korean government.

Photos and video of Bae published this week by Choson Sinbo show him with his head shaven and wearing gray overalls bearing the number 103.

Choson Sinbo, which caters to Japan’s pro-Pyongyang North Korean community, provided an unusual look at Bae’s life inside his “special education center” cell. It is 12 square meters and has a wash basin, a desk and a television.

Bae said he wakes up at 6 every morning. He then does farm work, planting seeds and weeding, until his labor ends at 6 pm. He gets Sundays and holidays off, he told the paper during a June 26 interview.

“People here are very considerate, so I’m not working too hard, but my health is not in the best condition so there are some difficulties,” Bae said in a Choson Sinbo video shared with CNN and posted to the paper’s Facebook page. It’s likely he gave the interview in the presence of North Korean officials.

Many in the United States see Bae’s imprisonment as bait with which North Korea hopes to win diplomatic concessions from Washington. North Korea remains locked in a standoff with the United States and its allies for continuing to develop nuclear weapons despite UN sanctions. It launched a long-range rocket in December and conducted a nuclear test in February.

Yoo Ho-yeol, a North Korean studies professor at Korea University in Seoul, said the photos and video of Bae “are purely for propaganda purposes.”

Yoo said North Korea hopes to use Bae as an excuse to bring the US government into dialogue. The United States has responded coolly to the North’s recent calls for talks, saying that Pyongyang must work toward denuclearization if it wants to improve relations.

Pyongyang denies using Bae, who is known in North Korea by the Korean name Pae Jun Ho, for political purposes.

Choson Sinbo’s Pyongyang bureau chief, Kim Ji Yong, said the paper “worked hard to get this interview. Why the officials decided to grant it, however, is for them to say.”

Bae informed his family in April he would not be allowed to appeal his sentence and urged them to lobby Washington to push for amnesty, North Korean officials have told The Associated Press.

“July 4th is my father’s 70th birthday. So I was hoping that my problem will be worked out by the end of June,” Bae said. “So my hope is that North Korea will forgive and the U.S. will try harder to get me out quickly. I’m asking for their help.”

Washington has called for Bae’s release.

“There is no greater priority for us than the welfare and safety of our US citizens abroad, as I’ve said many times,” State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell said in May. He urged North Korea to “grant Mr. Bae amnesty and immediate release.”

However, there has been no indication that a high-profile American envoy is set to travel to North Korea to negotiate his release.

At least five other Americans have been detained in North Korea since 2009. The others were eventually allowed to leave without serving out their terms, some after clemency missions by prominent Americans, including former Presidents Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has the power to grant special pardons under the North’s constitution.

Former NBA star Dennis Rodman has called on Kim to release the fellow American. The basketball player met and dined with Kim during a visit to North Korea earlier this year.

The human rights group Amnesty International has criticized Bae’s lack of access to a lawyer. Pyongyang says he confessed and didn’t want an attorney at sentencing.

Bae has had limited contact with the outside world. He has been visited by diplomats from the Swedish Embassy, which represents US interests there because Washington and Pyongyang lack official diplomatic ties.

AP Writer Elizabeth Shim in Seoul, South Korea, contributed to this report.

Your Thoughts …
Eric Talmadge

Eric Talmadge

The Associated Press

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