Two American tourists charged with “anti-state” crimes in North
Korea have pleaded for the US
government to help secure their release.
Matthew Miller and Jeffrey Fowle told the AP news agency
they expected to be tried soon and given long prison terms.
PRESIDENT OBAMA |
The two men said they were in good health and had been
treated well but expected conditions to get worse.
They were detained separately in April but both were accused
of “committing hostile acts” while in the country.
Fowle, 56, entered North
Korea on April 29 and was detained in early
June as he was leaving the country
He is said to have left a bible in the toilet of a
restaurant in the northern port city of Chongjin
but his family have insisted that he was not on a mission for his church.
North Korean authorities say Miller, 24, entered the country
on April 10 with a tourist visa but tore it up at the airport and shouted that
he wanted to seek asylum.
Speaking for the first time since being detained more than
three months ago, Miller said “the horizon for me is pretty dark.
“I don’t know what the worst-case scenario would be, but I
need help to extricate myself from this situation. I have been requesting help
from the American government, but have received no reply,” he added.
It is unclear whether North Korean officials were in the
room at the time of the interview or if the men were being coerced.
Authorities say they are preparing to bring the men before a
court, but the charges or potential punishment have not been specified. The
date of the trial has not been announced.
North Korea
has in the past been accused of using arrested Americans as diplomatic
bargaining chips.
The US
wants Pyongyang to abandon its
nuclear ambitions in return for economic and diplomatic incentives, but talks
on a deal agreed in 2007 have been stalled for several years.
Religious activity is severely restricted in North
Korea and missionaries have been arrested on
many previous occasions.
Kenneth Bae, the highest-profile of the currently detained
Americans, was sentenced to 15 years’ hard labour in May 2013 after being
accused of planning to overthrow the government. (BBC)
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