SEATTLE (AP) — A U.S. citizen
detained in North Korea for 15 months has been returned to a labor camp,
prompting worries about his health, his sister said Friday.
Kenneth Bae,
who led tour groups in North Korea, was arrested in late 2012 and
sentenced to 15 years hard labor for unspecified hostile acts. Calls for
his release on humanitarian grounds have gone unanswered. After he lost
50 pounds, he was moved last summer to a hospital from a prison work
camp where he had been farming vegetables.
His
sister, Terri Chung of Edmonds, Wash., said her family learned from the
U.S. State Department on Friday that Bae was taken back to the labor
camp on Jan. 20 — the same day Bae appeared before news reporters in
Pyongyang, wearing a prison uniform stamped with the number 103.
"He's back to eight-hours-a-day, six-days-a-week hard labor," she said. "We can't help but be concerned about that."
The
news coincided with the release of a story in a pro-Pyongyang newspaper
based in Japan, Choson Sinbo, reporting that a U.S. envoy was expected
to visit Bae.State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki did not comment directly on the report, and she gave no indication that an invitation had been extended by North Korea. Psaki reiterated that the U.S. has made a longstanding offer to send its envoy on North Korean human-rights issues, Robert King.
In
its report, Choson Sinbo said a reporter had interviewed Bae at the
prison, and Bae said he had been notified that King could visit as soon
as Monday and no later than the end of the month.
Such
diplomatic outreach to North Korea is unpredictable, particularly
because Washington and Pyongyang do not have formal ties. The North
invited King to visit in late August to seek a pardon for Bae, but it
withdrew the invite at the last minute, to protest U.S. military
exercises. More military drills between the U.S. and South Korea are
planned this month.
Psaki
voiced deep concern over Bae's transfer to the labor camp and about his
health, and she urged North Korea to grant him amnesty and immediate
release on humanitarian grounds.
Analysts
say North Korea has previously used detained Americans as leverage in
its standoff with the U.S. over its nuclear and missile programs,
although Pyongyang said last May it would not use Bae as a bargaining
chip.
Bae, a 45-year-old
father of three, was born in South Korea and immigrated to the U.S. with
his parents and sister in 1985. He had been living in China as a
Christian missionary for about seven years before his arrest. Within the
last few years, he began leading small tour groups, mostly of American
and Canadian citizens, into a "special economic zone" designed to
encourage commerce in northeastern North Korea.
The
State Department and Vice President Joe Biden have requested his
release, and on Thursday, President Barack Obama echoed those calls at
the annual National Prayer Breakfast in Washington, D.C.
"We
pray for Kenneth Bae, a Christian missionary who has been held in North
Korea for 15 months," Obama said. "His family wants him home, and the
United States will continue to do everything in our power to secure his
release because Kenneth Bae deserves to be free."
At his news
conference Jan. 20, Bae urged the U.S. to work for his release: "I
believe that my problem can be solved by close cooperation and agreement
between the American government and the government of this country." He
also apologized to North Korea and said he had committed
anti-government acts.
Bae's
news conference came weeks after North Korea freed an elderly American
veteran of the Korean War, Merrill Newman, who had been held for weeks
for alleged crimes during the 1950-53 conflict.
Bae's
family has said he suffers from diabetes, an enlarged heart, liver
problems and back pain. When his mother was allowed to visit him last
October, he could only stand for 30 to 45 minutes at a time, his sister
said.
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