A South Korean man watches a television news program showing Korean American
Kenneth Bae in Seoul, South Korea, May 2, 2013
North Korea says it will not
invite any prominent U.S. figure to seek the release of an imprisoned American,
and will not use him as a bargaining chip in any political negotiations.
Korean-American tour operator Kenneth Bae was arrested in the
North Korean city of Rason in November and charged with plotting to overthrow
the state. He was sentenced late last month to 15 years of hard labor.
A spokesman for the North Korean foreign ministry told the
state-run Korean Central News Agency Sunday that American media had been
speculating that Pyongyang would use the prisoner for political gain.
However, he said that although Pyongyang had released prisoners for
humanitarian reasons in the past, the latest case proved that such generosity
will be of no use.
Several Americans have been held in the North in recent years
and then freed after visits by high-profile Americans such as former presidents
Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton.
In 2009, two television journalists were detained and
sentenced to 12 years of hard labor after crossing into the North from China.
Former U.S. president Clinton later traveled to North Korea to win their
release.
In 2010, former U.S. president Carter negotiated the release
of U.S. national Aijalon Mahli Gomes, who was sentenced to eight years of hard
labor.
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