Carter secures release of US citizen jailed in North Korea

THE FORMER US president, Jimmy Carter, yesterday left North Korea after securing the release of an American who had been sentenced…

THE FORMER US president, Jimmy Carter, yesterday left North Korea after securing the release of an American who had been sentenced to eight years in prison for entering the country illegally.

Following talks with a senior North Korean official, Mr Carter also left with an apparent commitment by the regime to return to six-party talks on its nuclear weapons programme, the official Central Korean News Agency said.

Mr Carter flew from the capital Pyongyang on a private jet accompanied by Aijalon Gomes, a 31-year-old teacher who had been sentenced in April to eight years hard labour and a fine equivalent to €559,000.

Looking gaunt after his time in custody, Mr Gomes hugged Mr Carter before they boarded the plane at Pyongyang’s airport, seven months after he crossed into the country from China.

READ MORE

The news agency said that Mr Carter (85) had apologised for Mr Gomes’s actions and “courteously requested” a special pardon. It described the decision to grant the request as “a manifestation of [North Korea’s] humanitarianism and peace-loving policy”.

Mr Gomes was due to arrive in Boston later today to be reunited with his mother and other members of his family.

The US government stressed that Mr Carter’s three-day visit to Pyongyang had been a “private, humanitarian and unofficial mission”. “We welcome the release of Aijalon Mahli Gomes and are relieved that he will soon be safely reunited with his family,” said state department spokesman PJ Crowley.

“We appreciate former president Carter’s humanitarian effort and welcome North Korea’s decision to grant Mr Gomes special amnesty and allow him to return to the United States.

“Based on our assessment that Mr Gomes’s health was at serious risk if he did not receive immediate care in the United States, the US government concurred with Mr Carter’s decision to accept the North Korean proposal.”

Mr Gomes, an English teacher and Christian missionary, is among four US citizens to have been released by North Korea in the past year. He had apparently entered North Korea in January in an attempt to help his close friend and fellow Christian, Robert Park, whom he befriended while they were both working in Seoul.

Mr Park entered North Korea last Christmas Day hoping to highlight human rights abuses. He was expelled six weeks later.

Last August, another former US president, Bill Clinton, travelled to Pyongyang to secure the release of Laura Ling and Euna Lee, two television journalists who had been detained since March 2009 after straying across the border from China while filming a documentary.

Mr Carter’s mercy mission took place as it emerged that the North Korean leader, Kim Jong-il, had travelled to China with his son and heir apparent, Kim Jong-un, possibly to secure aid for the sanctions-hit North Korean economy. There were no indications that Kim Jong-il met Mr Carter before he left for Beijing.

State media said North Korea’s second-in-command, Kim Yong-nam, told Mr Carter the regime was committed to restarting stalled nuclear talks with the US, South Korea, China, Japan and Russia, and to denuclearising the Korean peninsula.

Washington and Seoul have refused to consider negotiations unless the North apologises for the sinking in March of a South Korean navy ship, in which 46 sailors died. An international team of inspectors concluded that the Cheonan had been struck by a torpedo fired from a North Korean mini-submarine. Pyongyang denies any involvement.

– ( Guardianservice)