
North Koreans including soldiers attend a rally in support of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un's order to put its missile units on standby in preparation for a possible war against the U.S. and South Korea, in Pyongyang March 29, 2013 (Reuters / KCNA)
North
Korea’s Supreme Court has sentenced Kenneth Bae, an American citizen, to 15
years' hard labor on charges that he committed crimes against the state.
Bae, who was referred to
throughout the trial as Pae-Jun-ho, the Korean iteration of his name, was first
detained in November and could have been executed for the charge that he
conspired to overthrow the government.
It’s been previously reported
Bae, who is said to be a devout Christian, entered North Korea legally and
often worked to feed starving children in the isolated country. He attended the
University of Oregon and previously worked as a tour operator in the US.
The news was first reported by
state media before being confirmed by Reuters and other Western outlets.
The exact nature of his
supposed crimes is not known, but Bae was arrested in Rason, a special economic
zone in North Korea bordering Russia and China, according to the Associated
Press.
The verdict comes after North
Korea has spent weeks threatening to reignite its nuclear reactors and begin
development of an atomic weapon. Korean Central News Agency, the state media
outlet, reported last week that the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea had
gathered incriminating evidence against Bae.
“In the process of the
investigation he admitted that he committed crimes aimed to topple to DPRK with
hostility toward it,” it reported. “His crimes were proved by evidence.”
Bae’s detention is widely seen
as posturing from North Korea's young leader Kim Jong-un.
“For North Korea, Bae is a
bargaining chip in dealing with the US,” Koh Yu-hwan, a professor of North
Korean Studies in Seoul, South Korea, told the AP. “The North will use him
in a way that helps bring the US toward talks when the mood slowly turns to
dialogue.”
Two American journalists were
arrested in North Korea in 2009 and sentenced to hard labor for trespassing and
hostile acts. After they were held for four months, former US president Bill
Clinton traveled to Pyongyang to negotiate their release with former
North Korean leader Kim Jong-il.
Including Laura Ling and Euna
Lee, the two journalists, Bae is the sixth American to be apprehended in North
Korea since 2009; the others were released or deported.
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