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Carter said doctors determined that Gomes, of Boston, had been treated "superbly" during his seven months in prison and that North Korean officials gave him his own prison cell. He also said Gomes was given his own hospital room in the country's capital, Pyongyang, after he tried to commit suicide, but he did not elaborate. He did not take oral questions and only answered those written on notecards. Carter said the Atlanta-based center was forced into a private mission to secure Gomes to fill the diplomatic void left by Washington's refusal to restore diplomatic ties with North Korea. He said he seeks approval from Washington before taking diplomatic travels, but he doesn't hold back once he gets there. "This is the kind of problem that the Carter Center faces. And in all of those areas, the U.S. won't become involved but the Carter Center does," said Carter, who founded the organization in 1982. "We go where we wish, we meet with whom we choose and we say what we believe." ___ Online:
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