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The U.N. Security Council's condemnation of the April 5 launch angered North Korea, which quit the international nuclear talks, expelled inspectors and threatened to conduct nuclear and long-range missile tests. Washington has expressed its willingness to hold talks with the North in order to get the nuclear negotiations back on track. But the North dismissed talks with the U.S. as useless. The announcement of the June trial date comes on the heels of the release in Iran this week of an American journalist originally sentenced to eight years for alleged spying. Roxana Saberi's sentence was reduced to a two-year suspended term. She was freed Monday after four months in jail. Under North Korea's criminal code, conviction for illegal entry could mean up to three years in a labor camp. Espionage or "hostility toward North Koreans"
-- possible crimes that could be considered "hostile acts" -- could draw five to 10 years in prison, South Korean legal experts say. Han, the lawyer, said the North was likely to hand down heavy sentences for Ling and Lee so they can hold onto the reporters and use them as a negotiating card. But he also speculated that the court could eventually grant the women a pardon. One analyst said a quick resolution of the case could spur diplomacy. "This is likely to open a floodgate for talks between the U.S. and the North," said Yang Moo-jin, a professor at Seoul's University of North Korean Studies.
[Associated
Press;
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