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Lameda wrote in a report to human rights group Amnesty International that his legal fate was determined by a high court judge in a tribunal of the Ministry of Internal Security. No evidence, formal charges or specific allegations were presented during the one-day proceeding, he said. Instead, court officials repeatedly demanded that Lameda confess his guilt. Lameda said a defense lawyer was assigned to him, but he only got to spend about a half hour with the attorney. He said that in court, the defense attorney gave a long speech praising the late North Korean leader Kim Il Sung before suggesting his client be sentenced to 20 years in a labor camp. The court agreed, but Lameda said he was released after serving six years. North Korea also has custody of a South Korean detained in late March in the Koreas' joint industrial complex in the northern border town of Kaesong. He was accused of slandering the communist regime.
South Korean officials have not been granted access to the man and his whereabouts Friday were unclear, the Unification Ministry said. North Korean officials told employer Hyundai Asan Corp. Yu Song-jin, a maintenance man at a Kaesong dormitory, was "doing fine" but did not say where he was being held, company official Park Sung-wook said Friday. ___ On the Net: Facebook page for Lee and Ling:
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group.php?gid60755553149
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