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The release
of the now three Americans being detained in North Korea seems unlikely in the
near future as Washington and Pyongyang move closer to the brink of conflict
over the growing nuclear threat on the Korean Peninsula.
Korean-American
Kim Sang Duk, also known as Tony Kim, became the third American to be held in
North Korea, when he was arrested Saturday at the Pyongyang International
Airport as he was trying to leave the country.
The 58-year-old
Kim was teaching accounting at the Pyongyang University of Science and
Technology (PUST,) a private university funded mostly by Western-based
Evangelical Christians groups that educates the children of the country's
elite.
Bargaining
chips
Nikki Haley,
the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, on Monday said Kim’s arrest is an
attempt by the “flailing” Kim Jong Un government to gain some leverage to deal
with the Untied States over its nuclear and missile programs.
The Swedish
Embassy in Pyongyang confirmed Kim’s arrest but North Korea has not yet
publicly charged him. A PUST official told the Reuters News Agency that Kim’s
arrest was not related to his work at the university but suggested it might be
connected to his outside volunteer activity at a local orphanage. In the past
North Korea, has arrested a number of missionaries for violating a ban on
proselytizing that is considered a crime against the state.
Nicholas
Burns, a former U.S. undersecretary of state said, “The North Koreans have a
history of taking American citizens hostage, detaining them illegally and
without any rationale. They obviously do this in order to up the ante on the
United States and perhaps have something to negotiate with the United States.”
Last year,
North Korea arrested Otto Warmbier just days before conducting its fourth
nuclear test in January 2016. The U.S. college student was later sentenced to
15 years of hard labor for trying to steal a political banner from his hotel in
Pyongyang. It later sentenced American missionary Kim Dong-chul to 10 years’
hard labor on charges of spying and other offenses.
U.S. citizens Otto Warmbier on March 16, 2016, left, and Kim Dong Chul on April 29, 2016; are escorted at court in Pyongyang, North Korea. |
Back channel
dialogue
Hailey said
the U.S. will work on securing the release of the Americans being held in North
Korea, but was vague as to what course of action Washington might pursue.
Previous
American detainees have been released after a few months, following visits from
high-profile Americans, including former presidents Bill Clinton and Jimmy
Carter.
But since
North Korea conducted its fourth nuclear test in January 2016, neither
Washington nor Pyongyang seem willing to make any conciliatory gestures. Under
former President Barack Obama the U.S. rallied international support for
increased sanctions against the Kim government.
Pyongyang
responded by accelerating nuclear and ballistic missile tests.
President
Donald Trump has further increased pressure by emphasizing possible military
strikes to prevent North Korea from developing an intercontinental ballistic
missile capable of striking the U.S. mainland.
Phil
Robertson, the deputy Asia director of the advocacy group Human Rights Watch
said Washington needs to find some back channel way to establish a working
dialogue with Pyongyang to negotiate the release of these individuals who have
become pawns in this international nuclear standoff.
“Clearly
we’ve got to do more. The United States has got to find a way to get these
people out as a matter of priority,” said Robertson.
Refugees
Trump has
emphasized that China needs to play a stronger role in restraining North Korea.
Robertson
said Beijing could send a strong message to Kim Jong Un by allowing more North
Korean refugees to escape through China to a third country like South Korea.
“If China
really wants to put a lot of pressure on North Korea, one of the easiest ways
to do so would be to stop trying to arrest North Koreans that go into China,”
he said.
The
humanitarian gesture, he said, would coincide with what seems to be China’s
increased enforcement of sanctions against its economically dependent ally, in
the wake of the increased U.S. military pressure.
China has
reportedly sent back cargo ships of North Korean coal, cut Chinese airline
flights to Pyongyang and warned in the editorial in the Communist Party-run
Global Times that another nuclear test would lead to a total oil ban. The price
of gasoline in Pyongyang almost doubled after the editorial appeared.
Human Rights
Watch this week called upon China to release eight North Korean refugees who
were reported to be arrested in March. Beijing does not recognize North Koreans
crossing into China as refugees but considers them economic migrants, and repatriates
them to North Korea.
Robertson
said illegal refugees forced to return to North Korea are incarcerated and
often subjected to “torture, sexual violence, forced labor, and even worse.”
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