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ASIA: Korea jails US journalists for 12 years

By Simon Martin
08 Jun 2009 3:31 PM

SEOUL, June 8 AFP - The United States is "deeply concerned" by North Korea's sentencing of two American journalists to 12 years in a labour camp, State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said on Monday.

"We are deeply concerned by the reported sentencing of the two American citizen journalists by North Korean authorities, and we are engaged through all possible channels to secure their release," Kelly said in a statement.

A North Korean court on Monday sentenced two female US journalists to 12 years in a labour camp for an illegal border crossing and an unspecified "grave crime", North Korean state media reported.

Laura Ling and Euna Lee were detained by North Korean border guards on March 17 along the frozen Tumen River, which marks the border with China, while researching a story about refugees fleeing the hardline communist state.

"Our thoughts are with the families of the two detained journalists at this difficult time," Kelly said.

"We once again urge North Korea to grant the immediate release of the two American citizen journalists on humanitarian grounds."

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Sunday the charges against the pair were baseless and they should be allowed to return home.

Pyongyang has in the past freed captured Americans but only after personal interventions. The US State Department last week did not rule out the possibility that former vice president Al Gore might undertake such a mission.

Gore is chairman of the California station Current TV, which employs the two journalists, both aged in their 30s.

Both detainees are married and Lee has a four-year-old daughter.

The long sentences were certain to fuel tensions with Washington after the North's May 25 nuclear test and its reported plans for another long-range rocket launch.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Sunday the charges against the pair were baseless and they should be allowed to return home.

Clinton also said the United States is considering putting North Korea back on its terrorism blacklist following its nuclear test.

Analysts have said the jailed women may become pawns in efforts to open direct negotiations with the United States.

The North has long sought direct talks in preference to the stalled six-party negotiations on nuclear disarmament of which Washington is a part.

The sentences "are tougher than expected," said Yoo Ho-Yeol, a professor and North Korea expert at Korea University.

"They aim to send a strong message to the United States that the North is taking the case very seriously and gravely," he told AFP.

Friends, family and colleagues held candlelight vigils in Washington and seven other US cities last week. Their families have appealed for clemency and urged the two governments not to link the case to the nuclear standoff.

Sweden's envoy in Pyongyang, who represents US interests in the absence of diplomatic ties, has been allowed three visits to the women. The North on May 26 allowed them to phone their families in the United States.

"We had not heard their voices in over two and a half months," said Ling's sister Lisa. "They are very scared -- they're very, very scared."

The North has been showing an increasingly defiant face to the world since it fired a long-range rocket on April 5 despite international appeals to refrain.

After the United Nations Security Council punished the launch by tightening sanctions, the North responded with its second nuclear test.

It has also renounced the armistice on the Korean peninsula and is said to be preparing to test medium-range missiles and a long-range Taepodong-2.

The North is also holding a South Korean employee of the Kaesong joint industrial estate just north of the border.

He has been detained since March 30 for allegedly criticising Pyongyang's political system and encouraging a woman worker to defect.

The North has accepted the South's proposal for working-level talks next week to settle disagreements over Kaesong's operations. But analysts said this did not indicate any desire to improve ties with Seoul.