Wednesday, August 28, 2013
US sends envoy to North Korea to seekKenneth Bae release
The US is to send a senior official to North
Korea to request the release of a US man
jailed in the communist state.
Robert King, the US special envoy for North Korean
rights, will arrive in Pyongyang on Friday, the state
department said.
He will request a pardon and amnesty for Kenneth
Bae, 45, on humanitarian grounds, it said.
Mr Bae, a Korean-American, was given 15 years' hard
labour in May for trying to overthrow the North
Korean government.
His family say he is seriously ill and has been moved
from a labour camp to a hospital. They say he has
diabetes and an enlarged heart.
"We remain deeply concerned about the health and
welfare of Kenneth Bae,'' a White House statement
said. "We urge the government of North Korea to
grant special clemency to Mr Bae immediately and
allow him to return home with Ambassador King.''
Mr Bae (known in North Korea as Pae Jun-ho) was
arrested in November 2012 as he entered the north-
eastern port city of Rason, a special economic zone
near North Korea's border with China.
He has been described as both a tour operator and
Christian missionary.
North Korea said he used his tourism business to
form groups to overthrow the government.
Mr Bae's trial and conviction came at a time of high
tension between the US and North Korea, in the wake
of the communist state's third nuclear test. It also
came as the US and South Korea conducted annual
large-scale military exercises, which angered
Pyongyang.
North Korea has arrested several US citizens in recent
years, including journalists and Christians accused of
proselytising.
They were released after visits to Pyongyang by high-
profile officials, including former presidents Bill
Clinton and Jimmy Carter.
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