Showing posts with label North Korea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label North Korea. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Reuters adds that experts on North Korea “said a guilty verdict is certain”

TO BE NOTED:


June 3, 2009, 6:25 pm

Vigils Held for American Reporters on Trial in North Korea

INSERT DESCRIPTIONYonhap/Associated Press Euna Lee, top, and Laura Ling.

Vigils in several American cities are being held Wednesday evening in support of two American journalists jailed in North Korea who are expected to go on trial Thursday morning.

As The Lede noted last month, Laura Ling, a Chinese-American, and Euna Lee, a Korean-American, were arrested by North Korea in March while they were filming for Current TV near the country’s border with China. According to North Korea, Reuters reports, the journalists crossed into North Korean territory “with hostile intent.”

Reuters adds that experts on North Korea “said a guilty verdict is certain” and that the two women “are likely to become bargaining chips in high-stake negotiations with the United States which has long sought to end the North’s nuclear ambitions.”

Supporters of the women were to hold candlelight vigils, which were organized on Facebook, in New York, Boston, Chicago, Washington D.C., Birmingham, Portland, San Francisco, Sacramento and Los Angeles.

As my colleague Choe Sang-Hun reported in April:

Ms. Ling, 32, is the younger sister of Lisa Ling, a television journalist who reported undercover in North Korea for National Geographic in 2006. In the piece, “Inside North Korea,” Lisa Ling posed as part of a medical team that used a hidden camera; her report exposed some of the hardships of living in North Korea and criticized the North Korean leader, Kim Jong-il.

Lisa Ling has received one letter from her sister Laura, dated May 15. This excerpt from the letter is posted Facebook:

When I first got here, I cried so much. Now, I cry less. I try very hard to think about positive things, but sometimes it is hard too. Some days I get to go outside and get some fresh air. In the early evening, I do some stretching. I also sit and meditate. I breathe deeply and think about positive things that have happened in the day. For example, I think “I’m lucky I made it through another day.” I’m lucky my family is working so hard to get me released. I’m thinking about you all constantly and how fortunate I am to have an amazing family. Stay strong and please take care of yourselves. That is my request. Know that I’m thinking of you and dreaming about being reunited with you all again.

All my love,
Laura

The Twitter feed Liberate Laura is calling for a “Twitter vigil” in support of the two women — asking that support for them be expressed by adding the tag #liberatelaura to tweets."

Monday, March 30, 2009

North Korea says it is preparing to indict two U.S. journalists held on its border with China

TO BE NOTED: From Bloomberg:

"North Korea Prepares to Indict U.S. Reporters Held at Border


By Michael Heath

March 31 (Bloomberg) -- North Korea says it is preparing to indict two U.S. journalists held on its border with China two weeks ago after accusing them of illegally entering the nation.

The reporters’ “suspected hostile acts have been confirmed by evidence and their statements, according to the results of intermediary investigation by a competent organ,” the communist state’s Korea Central News Agency said in a statement today. Authorities are “making a preparation for indicting them.”

KCNA didn’t say when the journalists may appear in court. They will be treated according to international law and allowed consular access, it said.

The case is adding to tensions with the U.S. as Kim Jong Il’s regime prepares to conduct a rocket launch and talks over North Korea’s nuclear arms program remain stalled. The government in Pyongyang acknowledged it was holding the journalists on March 21.

A Swedish envoy gained access to Laura Ling and Euna Lee, who work for San Francisco-based Current TV, for the first time at the weekend, the State Department said.

“An official of the Swedish Embassy met with each journalist individually,” said Gordon Duguid, a department spokesman. Sweden represents U.S. diplomatic interests in Pyongyang in the absence of formal diplomatic ties. Duguid said he couldn’t provide a specific time or place for the meetings.

The State Department said last week the North Koreans had assured U.S. officials that the pair would be treated well.

Missile Test Concern

U.S., South Korean and Japanese envoys met March 27 to discuss how to “maintain close coordination” if Kim’s regime test-fires a missile and ways to move forward talks on North Korea’s nuclear disarmament, Duguid said yesterday, according to a transcript. China and Russia are also members of the six-party negotiations.

International concern has been growing over North Korea’s announcement it will launch a communications satellite between April 4 and April 8. The U.S., Japan and South Korea say the launch may be a cover for testing an intercontinental ballistic missile.

They have warned Kim’s regime it risks sanctions by carrying out a launch prohibited under a United Nations Security Council resolution that bans North Korea from ballistic activity.

North Korea has repeatedly denied assertions the satellite launch is a guise for testing a ballistic missile."